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Close To Shore : A True Story of Terror in An Age of Innocence

Close To Shore : A True Story of Terror in An Age of Innocence

List Price: $25.95
Your Price: $25.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Bloated
Review: Not a bad writer. However there's not enough material in this story that warrants a full length book. The shark stuff is engrossing and he does a good job of covering that aspect. The personal stories are just too lightweight. Not interesting.

This should have been a magazine article and not a book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dive in - this is a good one!
Review: I never would have thought such a factual, historical tale could be told in the fashion of a novel, and manage at the same time to keep the reader intrigued, interested, and dangerously fascinated. Author Michael Capuzzo has done an outstanding job of relating incidents of the first known shark attacks on the East Coast, while at the same time wrapping the historical data in such fascinating verbage that reading this book was an absolute pleasure. People and places along the New Jersey coastline come to life for us in this book, and even the shark attacks take on a life of their own. If only all history writers could write like this - no one would ever think history boring again! The story unfolds easily, and flows throughout until the end. I didn't yawn once.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: I am so glad that I'm done with this utterly boring book.
Review: I don't even know where to start, but I guess I'll first mention that Michael Capuzzo is the King of Digression. I've read non-fiction books where the writer briefly discusses something off-topic for a while, but those digressions seemed to actually contribute something to the background or the story. This is not the case with Capuzzo's writing in this book. He continually tries to illustrate what life was like back in 1916 and create the setting, but it's way, way out of balance -- there's just way too much creation of the situation, with so little of the actual situation to bolster it. I only need to think of his description of the Vansant family or the Engleside Hotel (and there are tons of other examples in the book, like Stanley Fisher or Hermann Oelrichs or Dr. Lucas) to remember occasions where he spent page after page talking about a person's background, and then they're only in the action for but a second! I realize that there might be some difficulty in including a lot of action when the events took place way back in 1916, but that doesn't change the fact that a great deal of text should have been slashed.

That reminds me -- the book is not excellently written or edited. For example, in the chapter "To Find Prey", the following sentence is found: "Invisible lateral lines running down the length of its body recorded changing water pressure." (1.) Lines running down the length of its body are called LONGITUDINAL lines, not lateral lines. Don't use terms you don't know the meaning of. (2.) Even if the author was correct in his use of the term "lateral", the sentence would be totally redundant! In addition, Capuzzo spends quite a few pages discussing the shark like it's a machine that has been technologically equipped specifically to be a predator (which it has), but he keeps coming back to the same metaphor, over and over again! Learn a new trick already! Later in that same chapter is another error in writing: he discusses two long distance swimmers that went way out in the ocean for separate swims, and when they came back, people on the shore told the swimmers that they had been followed by a shark. But Capuzzo makes no mention whatsoever of HOW the people on the shore knew that they had been followed! Inconsistencies like this make the book confusing and irritating.

You know that when you continually look to see how many pages you have left to go before the book is done, you don't like it. I was really disappointed with this book, and I found Capuzzo's writing style thoroughly boring. He writes like he's writing a term paper. I believe that he may have been going for the same writing style as in the book "The Perfect Storm", but if so, it falls short because there's just too little text in "Close To Shore" in which something actually HAPPENS, to keep the reader interested.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wow!
Review: This book was a better shark book than Jaws. Parts of the story actually gave me goosebumps. This was a real page turner, I read it in one day. Everything you ever wanted to know or did not want to know about sharks. Very scary!!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A precursor to JAWS
Review: Michael Capuzzo crafts a harrowing factual account of a series of great white shark attacks off the Jersey shore in 1916 that resulted in four fatalities. In what is considered the Edwardian age, America is at the precipice of entering World War One. In the final summer prior to involvement in this conflict, people in all walks of life flock to the beaches for diversion. Ocean swimming has only recently become popular.

The array of knowledge about sharks at this time is severely limited. Amazingly, the most celebrated zoologists of the time do not consider sharks to be threatening to man and certainly not man eaters. Medicine, at the time, has not advanced to the point of being able to treat injuries commonly suffered in shark attacks.

When Capuzzo talks about an age of innocence he isn't kidding. Due to a unique set of circumstances a great white strays far away from its usual feeding grounds to terrorize unsuspecting swimmers bathing off Long Beach Island, New Jersey. The ferocity of the attacks paralyzes the economy of the whole Atlantic seaboard as nobody will go to the beach. The whole country, including President Woodrow Wilson who summers on the Jersey shore, is gripped by this unprecedented series of attacks.

The book is part action adventure and part national geographic. Chapters as seen through the eyes of he shark are both very revealing and extremely creative. Peter Benchley used this episode to create his classic novel Jaws.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I'll Never Go Near The Water Again.......
Review: I've been entranced by sharks ever since I saw Jaws on TV when I was 8. I haven't been in the ocean since then. Apparently staying out of the ocean isn't enough....

Close To Shore tells the story of a Great White shark that held the Jersey shore in a grip of terror in the Summer of 1916. After claiming 2 victims from the Ocean, the shark made a change of venue, moving from the ocean to Matawan Creek.

I thought that the book started out kind of slow; Capuzzo richly chronicles every aspect of life in the Summer of 1916- It's a fabulous history lesson, but I was eager for the Shark to take center stage. Once that happens, the book becomes impossible to put down. As the bibliograpy section in the back shows, Capuzzo REALLY did his homework- the shark and her victims are vividly portrayed, and the attacks are horrific. (One of the victims is savaged while trying to recover the body of a young boy that the shark had been feeding on.) The heroism that some of the real-life "characters" exhibit is amazing, and Capuzzo does them full justice by portraying them as PEOPLE, not just lunch

Close To Shore is an amazing read, and an amazing history lesson.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Hard to hold attention, but lots of detail
Review: I am a fan of shark stories and history as well. I purchased this book despite the mixed reviews. I have to agree with the reviews. The author obviously wants to set the tone and atmosphere of 1916 New Jersey. But, I would've prefered about 75 less pages to read to get to the first shark attack. The author is rambling on and on about all these historic details. I think it is overkill. I would've liked to see some pictures too. But, I guess that is what our imaginations are for. In the author's defense, he worked hard to research these details. I commend him for that.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Death by Adjective Attack
Review: This book is perhaps the most over-written book in recent memory. Capuzzo mars a story that is compelling on its own by reaching way too far - padding the tale with extraneous, awkward, inappropriate social history and detail that contributes little to the inherent drama. And sentence after sentence after sentence after sentence goes on and on and on and on as if he were being paid by the word and evey noun deserved not one, but two or three adjectives - his thesaurus function must be worn out on his laptop. I was really looking forward to this book and enjoyed it after the first 100 pages, when the writer finally got out of the way and let the facts of the story tell itself. But the first hundred pages were absolutely excruciating. Great writing is transparent; there is far too much murk in this book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Engrossing
Review: Superbly written account of the 1916 New Jersey shark attacks.Goes way beyond the usual basic facts and sensational nonsense of most "Shark Books". Provides a fascinating profile of the victims, their families and how these attacks impacted on American society at the time. The author creates some amazing "Atmosphere" and has a great feel for the era he is describing. Much of the book is written from the shark's perspective which proves to be a powerful and effective idea.The final chapters in which the shark makes it's way up the Matawan is a writing tour de force. Australians such as yours truly would find the American authorities lack of information about sharks attacks in 1916 to be positively unbelievable as many attacks had been witnessed and well documented in this country as far back as the 1790s.The only disappointing aspect of "Close to Shore" is the complete lack of photos . This may have been due to reasons beyond the author's control or perhaps it was nothing more than a stylistic preference. Still, the book is thoroughly engrossing and well worth buying.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great way to learn about the 1916 attacks
Review: In July 1916, five swimmers along the New Jersey coastline were mauled in a series of shark attacks. Four of the swimmers died of their injuries. These attacks terrorized the Atlantic coast and spawned one of the most famous horror movies of all time, Jaws.

Michael Capuzzo ties together historical vignettes of the time with detailed sketches of the victims and their families to make the attacks come alive. Using a narrative style possibly better suited for fiction, _Close to Shore_ provides a good overview of the attacks before moving on to Capuzzo's thesis regarding the attacks.

Tying together modern shark research with his own research into the 1916 attacks, Capuzzo presents a compelling thesis to explain the attacks.

If you're interested in sharks in general, or the 1916 attacks specifically, you should find this book well worth your time.


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