The Cursed Sea explores the extraordinary body of ritual, taboo, and supernatural belief that governed life at sea across Britain, Scandinavia, Iberia, and the broader Atlantic world. It covers the words that could not be spoken aboard a fishing boat and the ceremonies that had to be performed before any vessel left port. It examines the birds that carried the souls of dead sailors in their wings, the cats that predicted storms, the tattoos that made bargains with the ocean on behalf of the men who wore them. It looks at the deep fear surrounding a ship's name, the elaborate rituals of burial at sea, and the belief that a single unlucky crew member could doom an entire voyage.
These were not the superstitions of ignorant men. They were the applied belief system of highly skilled people working in the most lethal environment on earth, where technical knowledge ran out long before the danger did, and where the gap between seamanship and survival had to be filled with something.
That something was a complete cosmology, sophisticated and internally coherent, transmitted across generations in fishing ports and naval dockyards and merchant harbours from the Shetland Islands to the Caribbean. It treated the ocean not as backdrop but as a living power, reactive and moral, capable of punishment and capable of mercy, and it provided those who lived within it with a framework for action in circumstances that otherwise offered none.
The sea has not changed. Neither, entirely, has the human response to it.