Guest contributor: Bill Lundgren
Lundgren’s Book Lounge: “The Sea and Civilization,” by Lincoln Paine
categories: Cocktail Hour / Reading Under the Influence
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Refreshingly, Paine discredits the Eurocentric version of maritime history that animates much of what me might have been taught in school. Those accounts suggest that maritime exploration began with the Vikings, leading to Christopher Columbus and the era of European expansion. But as Paine points out, seafaring cultures worldwide predated the European explorers by thousands of years. Sails were being utilized by the Egyptian, Chinese and Mesopotamian cultures eons before the Scandinavians and other European cultures had even begun to turn their gaze toward the seas or the notion of wind-powered water voyages.
Paine lays out the central role that maritime forays have played in connecting different cultures and civilizations and their role in fostering economic relationships. Along the way he artfully leads up to the present and the crucial part that commercial shipping and naval warfare have played in shaping today’s geo-political world. Throughout Paine, author of four previous books and numerous articles on maritime history, enchants the reader with a style that is immensely engaging, erudite and driven by the author’s intellectual curiosity.
The prodigious research at the heart of the book is never cloying but serves instead to enlighten and illuminate. At six hundred pages with an additional hundred pages of notes and bibliography, this is a book that asks an investment of time by its readers, but it is time spent in pure, rapturous reading pleasure.
[Bill Lundgren is a writer and blogger, also a bookseller at Longfellow Books in Portland, Maine (“A Fiercely Independent Community Bookstore”). He keeps a bird named Ruby, and teaches at Southern Maine Community College.]