SOUNDING takes us into the extraordinary mind and emotions of the magnificent sperm whale, an aging bull roaming the waters of the Atlantic. Troubled and separated from his herd, the whale wants to fulfill his one obsessive desire -- to communicate with the human race and learn why they can be both vicious hunters and frolicking playmates. Far away, on a doomed Russian nuclear submarine. · Sounding is one of those rare books that transcends any sort of limitations and is a fascinating, and interesting read for just about anyone, regardless of age, sex, education, or any other criteria. It is deep without being overly difficult, it is moderately long but quite gripping, and it tells two narratives that are entirely plausible, notwithstanding the fact that one is entirely fabricated on almost 5/5(1). · Sounding by Hank Searls. Our whale friends who traverse the southern oceans enjoyed fantastic news this month. Thanks to an unequivocal decision by the World Court, these leviathans were granted a temporary stay from hunting by Japan’s largest whaling program. The court rejected Japan’s claims that this hunting was “for scientific purposes.”.
Hank Searls(). Writer. + Add or change photo on IMDbPro». Novelist and screenwriter, author of the best-selling "Overboard", "Jaws II" (based on the movie Tappajahai 2 ()) and "Sounding", creator of The New Breed () TV series and writer of episodes of Takaa-ajettu (). Looking for books by Hank Searls? See all books authored by Hank Searls, including Jaws 2, and Jaws The Revenge, and more on www.doorway.ru Showing results by author "Hank Searls" in All Categories. Skip to product list Skip to product list pagination.
Hank Searls' novel, The Crowded Sky, was made that same year into a feature movie featuring Dana Andrews, Rhonda Fleming, Anne Francis, and Troy Donahue. Set in the USAF's Strategic Air Command, the novel The Penetrators is the story of a maverick Royal Air Force exchange officer who commands a mock Avro Vulcan bomber attack on the USA. Sounding by Hank Searls. Our whale friends who traverse the southern oceans enjoyed fantastic news this month. Thanks to an unequivocal decision by the World Court, these leviathans were granted a temporary stay from hunting by Japan’s largest whaling program. The court rejected Japan’s claims that this hunting was “for scientific purposes.”. As the young man spends what may be his last days with the ship’s lovely surgeon, he listens to the plaintive calls of the whales sounding—calls of compassion, fear, and anger at humankind’s attacks on his species.
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