Osha Gray Davidson has written for the New York Times, the New Republic, the Nation, the Philadelphia Inquirer,
and the San Francisco Chronicle. He is the author of The Best of Enemies: Race and Redemption in the New South,
which was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize and short-listed for the Helen Bernstein Award. He is also the author
of Under Fire: The NRA and the Battle for Gun Control, a New York Times Notable Book in 1993, and Broken Heartland:
The Rise of America's Rural Ghetto.
Review
"THE ENCHANTED BRAID is crammed with detail...the abundance of information makes it an invaluable primer
on the current state of coral reef ecology."
--Chicago Tribune, September 6, 1998
Submitted by Publisher, March, 2001
Summary
Of the myriad ecosystems populating the underwater world, coral reefs are by far the most complex. While their
stunning beauty has been extolled for centuries, the intricate workings of reef environments remained largely hidden
from view. In fact, until the advent of scuba diving just fifty years ago, corals have been among the last natural
histories to be extensively explored. The high passion with which scientists have greeted this particular investigation
--beginning with the foundational theories of Charles Darwin in 1842--is perhaps unprecedented, but hardly difficult
to understand. A phenomenon of both awesome beauty and vital importance, the coral reef is home to the most diverse
range of species of any environment on the planet, including fish, shrimps, worms, snails, crabs, sea cucumbers,
sea stars, urchins, anemones, and sea squirts.
The crux of reef life, scientists have discovered, lies in nature's most intimate example of symbiosis: the
mutually beneficial relationship between the coral polyp and its "tenant," the zooxanthellate algae.
Davidson's history begins with this deceptively diminutive hybrid, the engine behind the construction of the limestone-based
coral structure. Together, the three elements comprise a unique zoophytalite (animal-plant-mineral) form, or an
"enchanted braid."
Aided by an eight-page, full-color photographic insert demonstrating the incredible intricacies of the reef
and its unique inhabitants, The Enchanted Braid identifies the approximately 240,000 square miles of coral
reef on the planet today as indispensable not only to the livelihood of the oceans but also to humans. The reef
is, after all, the "soul of the sea," the spawning ground for tens of thousands of marine species. As
sources of food (many islands rely on reefs for all their protein), medicine (corals are used in bone grafts and
to fight cancer and leukemia), and detailed insight into the history of climatic conditions, coral reefs are critically
important to human life on Earth. However, in a world of oil tanker disasters, global warming, and dwindling natural
resources, they are also in grave danger of extinction.
Osha Gray Davidson's urgent clarion call to halt today's man-made degradation of coral reefs is both alarming
and persuasive, effectively underscored by the rich historical context of passages from Darwin's captivating diary
of his seminal work on reefs 150 years ago. Like the coral reef, The Enchanted Braid is itself a rare hybrid, a
graceful combination of aesthetic appreciation, scientific inquiry, and environmental manifesto.
Table of Contents
THE SOUL OF THE SEA.
"Who Has Known the Ocean?" Animal, Mineral, Vegetable.
Darwin in Paradise.
The Rise of Corals.
The Heart of Lightness.
The Outer Strands.
A Song of Love and Death.
Fish Stories.
Neither Brethren nor Underlings.
HUMAN/NATURE.
The Jakarta Scenario.
"Either We Go Deep or We Starve." The Apo Scenario.
Return to Oceanus.
Disasters, Catastrophes, and Tragedies.
Unweaving the Outer Braids.
Once More to the Keys.
Notes.