Article 70X1R Beasts of the Sea: the tragic story of how the ‘gentle, lovable’ sea cow became the perfect victim

Beasts of the Sea: the tragic story of how the ‘gentle, lovable’ sea cow became the perfect victim

by
Donna Ferguson
from Science | The Guardian on (#70X1R)

Iida Turpeinen's novel has been a sensation in her native Finland. On the eve of its UK publication, she talks about her compulsion to tell of the sociable giant's plight

Iida Turpeinen is the author of Beasts of the Sea, a Finnish novel tracing the fate of a now-extinct species: the sea cow. Similar to dugongs and manatees, the sea cow was only discovered in 1741 by the shipwrecked German-born naturalist Georg Wilhelm Steller but by 1768 it had already become the first marine species to be eradicated by humans.

Translated into 28 languages and shortlisted for the country's most prestigious literary award, the Finlandia Prize, Beasts of the Sea was described by the Helsinki Literacy Agency as the most internationally successful Finnish debut novel ever. Turpeinen, 38, a PhD student of comparative literature, is now a resident novelist at Finland's Natural History Museum. Her book will be published in the UK on 23 October.

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