The desert and the sea 977 days captive on the Somali pirate coast

Michael Scott Moore

Book - 2018

"With echoes of Catch-22 and Black Hawk Down, author and former hostage Michael Scott Moore masterfully walks a fine line between personal narrative and journalistic distance in this page-turning and novelistic account of 977 days held captive by Somali pirates. Moore set off for Somalia in January 2012 after reporting on a historic trial of ten Somali pirates in Germany. He went with an open mind and a grant from the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting. He knew the stories of poor fishermen whose livelihoods were threatened by international fishing vessels; he sympathized with the legacies of colonialism. Near the end of his trip, however, a gang of pirates captured him and demanded a ransom of twenty million dollars. Moore would be s...tuck in Somalia for more than two and a half years, shifted from camps in the desert bush to barren prison houses, and--for several months--he was held on a hijacked tuna vessel, where he would make friends with a crew of hostage fishermen. As the only Western journalist to witness everyday life on a ship captured by Somali pirates, Moore recounts his dizzying ordeal as a rich and surprising story of survival. After a daring but desperate attempt to escape, he struggles with murderous fantasies as well as thoughts of suicide. Some of his guards--happy to have an American to taunt--suggest his long captivity is payback for the Battle of Mogadishu, the basis for the book Black Hawk Down, more than two decades before. In the face of threats to kill him, or sell him to al-Shabaab, Moore maintains his humanity and his sardonic wit. He relates his captivity with calm detachment, brilliantly weaving his own experience as a hostage with the religious and political factors behind Somali piracy. His wide-ranging narrative brings us into the destitute lives of his guards, as well as memories of his father's self-destruction. The Desert and the Sea falls at the intersection of reportage, memoir, and history."--Dust jacket.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

364.154/Moore
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 364.154/Moore Checked In
Subjects
Genres
True crime stories
Published
New York, NY : Harper Wave,, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Michael Scott Moore (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes glossary of names.
Physical Description
451 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780062449177
  • Prologue
  • Part 1. The Rumor Kitchen
  • Part 2. Underworld
  • Part 3. Living in Civilization Keeps us Civilized
  • Part 4. The Ambiguous Asian Fishing Boat
  • Part 5. Flight
  • Part 6. No God But God
  • Part 7. The Hostage Cookbook
  • Part 8. Stronger than Dirt
  • Part 9. Fugue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Glossary of Names
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Moore's account of his captivity in Somalia is a fascinating page-turner. A Berlin-based writer, Moore traveled to Somalia in 2012 on a grant for crisis reporting and hired a guide to facilitate a meeting with pirates. Incredibly, pirates kidnapped him on the trip, believing him to be able to pay a 20-million-dollar ransom and obtain letters of exoneration from President Obama. After three years, his mother paid a lesser ransom and Moore was freed. Enduring conditions that could make any person suicidal, Moore reflects on his father's death, which he long believed to be caused by a heart attack but was in fact a suicide. Moore's honest writing will speak to readers; he is candid about his feelings, his mistakes, Somalia, his conditions, and his pirates. He walks the tightrope of inviting readers to have empathy for pirates whose national history includes brutal colonialism while demonstrating the pirates' capacity for torture. Moore also invites us to learn about him, as he himself does, during these three years that will forever mark him. Having faced an experience no one ever should, Moore constructs a narrative that makes readers' hearts beat faster and with purpose.--Dziuban, Emily Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

This intense, often claustrophobic memoir relates journalist Moore's 977 days as a captive of Somali pirates. The author traveled to Somalia hoping to write an article paralleling the country's present situation with 17th-century America, where colonists sometimes found work as pirates. But events went sour from the start. Moore never felt safe, even with his hosts. Later, he became convinced these same hosts betrayed him into the hands of the pirates. The author leavens the description of his harrowing experience by writing of other topics: his captors' religious beliefs, which divided people into believers and "those for whom we don't cry"; the radical mood swings he underwent and why they never led to thoughts of suicide; his troubled relationship with a father whose suicide shaped his own life. Among the virtues of this account is that even when discussing sensational happenings, Moore never overdramatizes. VERDICT This exceptional memoir will attract many readers.-David Keymer, Cleveland © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A harrowing and affecting account of two and a half years of captivity at the hands of Somali pirates."It's hard to write one adventurous book without thinking about another," writes Moore early on, recounting his quest, recounted in Sweetness and Blood (2010), to document how the American fascination with surfing had spread into other parts of the world. Americans and the rest of the world were then fascinated with the pirates making news by marauding off the Horn of Africa, and so the author traveled to witness them firsthand. "The rise of modern pirates buzzing off Somalia was an example of entropy in my lifetime," he writes, "and it seemed important to know why there were pirates at all." He quickly learned. Taken captive, Moore learned lessons in the sociology, economics, and psychology of piracy while at the same time enduring some terrible treatmentsome of it for show, some of it quite in earnestas his captors tried to convince his poor mother, and then whomever would listen, to come up with $20 million for his freedom. There's plenty of gallows humor as Moore settles in for his long spell of unhappiness. When his young captors, "stoned on narcotic cud," blast music from their cellphones, he asks a senior to get them to turn it down. "They're soldiers," he's told by way of explanation, to which he replies, "ask them to be quiet soldiers." Imprisoned among a score or so of other captives, mostly Chinese and Filipino, the author discerned that many Somalis turn to piracy for lack of other opportunities, but while "each pirate was here to steal my money," few were eager to cause him personal harm. Moore's humane consideration of his captors reflects some of the small kindnesses he was shown, but it also contrasts with the indifference of Western officials who, it seems, would sooner have sent in the bombers than pay the ransom.A deftly constructed and tautly told rejoinder to Robert Louis Stevenson's Kidnapped, sympathetic but also sharp-edged. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.