Whalefall is a 2023 novel by Daniel Kraus about a teenage scuba diver who is swallowed by a sperm whale.

Whalefall
Book cover
AuthorDaniel Kraus
Audio read byKirby Heyborne (Simon & Schuster Audio)
Cover artistWill Staehle[1]
LanguageEnglish
GenreThriller
PublisherMTV Entertainment Books (US)
Publication date
August 8, 2023
Publication placeUnited States
Media type
Pages336
ISBN9781665918169

Its cover art is by Will Staehle.[1]

Plot summary

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Jay Gardiner is a teenager living in the California Central Coast who is struggling over the recent death of his father, Mitt Gardiner. Mitt was a well-known figure in the local scuba diving community who worked a variety of jobs that drew on his diving and nautical skills. While Mitt was well-liked by local divers, he had a strained relationship with Jay. After an incident in which Mitt gets drunk and pressures Jay to cut himself, Jay moves out and begins staying with friends. Not long after, Mitt is diagnosed with advanced mesothelioma. Despite pressure from his mother and sisters, Jay never visits his father to make amends. Mitt later commits suicide by jumping off a boat off the coast of Monastery Beach near Monterey, California while weighed down with diving weights. Feeling both shame over his inability to live up to Mitt's expectations, and guilt over his culpability in Mitt's suicide, Jay decides to scuba dive at Monastery Beach to attempt to retrieve his father's remains.

Partway through this dive, Jay encounters a giant squid, which is being attacked by a sperm whale. As the whale is attempting to eat the squid, Jay's diving gear gets caught on the squid and he is swallowed. Jay, though seriously injured, attempts a number of strategies to escape, including crawling deeper into the whale's digestive tract, using a squid beak to cut himself out of the whale's stomach, and climbing out of the stomach into the whale's throat using a jellyfish's bioluminescence to illuminate handholds. While navigating these physical challenges, Jay confronts his role in Mitt's suicide. Throughout the ordeal, Jay communicates with the disembodied voice of his father, which seems to be connected to the whale, and the two eventually make amends. Jay escapes from the whale by creating an explosion in the whale's stomach using steel wool and batteries and is rescued.

Characters

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  • Jay Gardiner, a teenage from Monterey, California whose father taught him to scuba dive
  • Mitt Gardiner, a gruff professional scuba diver and whale watching boat captain who resents his son's sensitive nature
  • Hewey, Mitt's friend, a retired dentist
  • Mom, Jay's mother
  • Nan, one of Jay's two sisters
  • Eva, one of Jay's two sisters

Reception

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Whalefall received generally positive reviews and was included in a list of the "Best Thrillers of 2023" by the New York Times.[2] Sarah Lyall of the New York Times described the book as a "crazily enjoyable, beat-the-clock adventure story about fathers, sons, guilt and the mysteries of the sea," and compared the book to the survival film 127 Hours.[3] Lyall also suggests that the psychological explorations of Jay's and Mitt's relationship can sometimes feel "a bit heavy-handed." A positive review in Paste Magazine suggested the book plays with readers' expectations through its similarity to archetypal stories about people being swallowed by marine animals, such as the Biblical story of Jonah.[4] NPR's Up First podcast described the book as a "page-turning thriller" and a "deep meditation on fathers, sons and loss."[5]

References

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  1. ^ a b Iglesias, Gabino (December 14, 2023). "Gabino Iglesias Reviews Whalefall by Daniel Kraus". Locus.
  2. ^ Lyall, Sarah (2 December 2023). "The Best Thrillers of 2023". The New York Times. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
  3. ^ Lyall, Sarah (30 July 2023). "Swallowed by a Sperm Whale, and Mourning His Father". The New York Times. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
  4. ^ Jackson, Matthew. "Daniel Kraus' Whalefall Is a Pulse-Pounding, Stunning Achievement". Paste Magazine. Paste. Retrieved 1 June 2024.
  5. ^ "The Sunday Story: A Life Worthy of Whalefall". Up First Podcast. National Public Radio. Retrieved 1 June 2024.