
Fluke: Or, I Know Why the Winged Whale Sings
āReaders new to the work of Christopher Moore will want to know two things immediately. First: Where has this guy been hiding? (Answer: In plain sight, since he has a cult following.)ā¦[H]e writes laid back fables straight out of Margaritaville, on the cusp of humor and science fiction.āāJanet Maslin, New York Times
Whale researcher Nathan Quinn has a problem. Itās not a new problem; in fact, itās been around for nearly 20 million years. And Nateās spent most of his adult life working to solve it. You see, although everybody (well, almost everybody) knows that humpback whales sing (outside of human composition, the most complex songs on the planet) no one knows why. Nate, a Ph.D. in behavior biology, intends to discover the answer to this burning questionāand soon.
Every winter he and Clay Demolocus, his partner in the Maui Whale Research Foundation, ply the warm waters between the islands of Maui and Lanai, recording the eerily beautiful songs of the humpbacks and returning to their lab for electronic analysis. The trouble is, Nateās beginning to wonder if he hasnāt spent just a little too much time in the sun. Either that, or heās losing his mind. Because today, as he was shooting an I.D. photo of a humpback tail fluke, Nate couldāve sworn he saw the words āBite Meā scrawled across the whaleās tail. . .
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āReaders new to the work of Christopher Moore will want to know two things immediately. First: Where has this guy been hiding? (Answer: In plain sight, since he has a cult following.)ā¦[H]e writes laid back fables straight out of Margaritaville, on the cusp of humor and science fiction.āāJanet Maslin, New York Times
Whale researcher Nathan Quinn has a problem. Itās not a new problem; in fact, itās been around for nearly 20 million years. And Nateās spent most of his adult life working to solve it. You see, although everybody (well, almost everybody) knows that humpback whales sing (outside of human composition, the most complex songs on the planet) no one knows why. Nate, a Ph.D. in behavior biology, intends to discover the answer to this burning questionāand soon.
Every winter he and Clay Demolocus, his partner in the Maui Whale Research Foundation, ply the warm waters between the islands of Maui and Lanai, recording the eerily beautiful songs of the humpbacks and returning to their lab for electronic analysis. The trouble is, Nateās beginning to wonder if he hasnāt spent just a little too much time in the sun. Either that, or heās losing his mind. Because today, as he was shooting an I.D. photo of a humpback tail fluke, Nate couldāve sworn he saw the words āBite Meā scrawled across the whaleās tail. . .












