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White Shark

Peter Benchley

Plot Summary

White Shark

Peter Benchley

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 1974

Plot Summary
White Shark is a speculative horror novel by Peter Benchley. First published in 1994, it follows a marine biologist who encounters an enemy far deadlier than a shark while on a research mission in Connecticut. Although a popular novel, it is not Benchley’s best-loved work, which is the infamous Jaws. Benchley’s other writing credits include co-writing the screenplay for Jaws, writing columns in The Washington Post, and writing speeches for the White House. He’s best known for blending horror, history, and scientific research.

White Shark opens at the end of WWII. Ernst Kruger, a Nazi scientist, escapes his damaged submarine, fleeing with a locked bronze box. The photographer David Webber, finding the box a few years later, opens it. Something attacks David, and he is never seen again. This event sets up the rest of the novel.

Simon Chase is a marine biologist working off the shore of Connecticut. He runs a small institute where he studies sharks, and he works to preserve marine life. When the novel begins, he’s focused on tracking down a pregnant shark in the area. The shark is feeding locally, and he’s worried that it’s a danger to humans. He doesn’t tell anyone about the Great White for now, because he doesn’t want anyone to panic, but he needs to move it somewhere else. An ex-member of Greenpeace, he would never dream of harming an animal unless absolutely necessary.



While Simon hunts for the Great White, a new threat emerges. Some monster is killing humans near the coast; the injuries are inconsistent with a shark attack. Needing help to identify what’s killing people, local researchers approach Simon. He goes to the site of the last body and can’t believe what he’s seeing. From the markings on the victims and the state of their skin, Simon doesn’t believe a sea creature is responsible. He finds traces of metal where teeth or claws broke the skin—no Great White would leave that.

Meanwhile, a video surfaces of the photographer David opening the mysterious bronze box. Something escapes from the box, blooding the camera, and dragging David overboard. Simon believes that whatever escaped from this box is in the ocean and that there’s something far deadlier out there now than a pregnant shark. Simon turns to a colleague for help.

Amanda Macy is a marine researcher whom Simon has a crush on. He has always been too shy to tell her how he feels, but this monster gives him an opportunity to seek her out. He asks her for help spotting the creature in the water and tracking its location. She agrees, strapping cameras onto sea lions swimming locally. One of these cameras catches the monster before it attacks the sea lion colony. No one has seen anything like it.



While Simon is trying to figure out what this creature is and how it got into their waters, his twelve-year-old son, Max, comes to visit. Divorced from his wife, Simon only has visitation with Max periodically. Max will only be with him for a month over the summer, and this will be the first time they have seen each other in years.

At first, Simon and Max are uncomfortable together. Simon doesn’t know how to entertain a twelve-year-old boy, and Max is awkward around him. To make matters worse, Simon must put all his energy into catching the killer sea creature. This is too dangerous a job to share with Max, but Max wants to see what his father does for a living.

When animals onshore are found with wounds like the wounds found on beach victims, the area is put on high alert. Whatever this creature is, it can breathe and move on land. Simon considers sending Max home for his own safety, but he doesn’t want to risk never seeing him again. However, if Simon and Amanda don’t find the monster soon, everyone on the coast could be wiped out.



While Simon and Amanda try to figure out the nature of the beast, Jacob Franks, a Holocaust survivor, tracks them down. He explains that, during WWII, he assisted a Nazi scientist to create a twisted, experimental weapon—an amphibious human. Most of the humans died because they couldn’t survive the alterations, but one lived. This “man,” Der Weiss Hai, had steel claws and teeth implanted into his body, and the scientist taught him how to breathe effectively. This creature is tormenting the locals.

Simon asks Jacob how they can destroy Der Weiss Hai. He says that the creature can’t return to water once it’s been ashore. Simon, however, explains the creature is already onshore. Jacob says that, if they don’t catch Der Weiss Hai, he’ll kill everyone. They plot to lure the creature into a decompression chamber. There, they explode it. Life returns to normal. Amanda and Simon start seeing each other, and Simon repairs his relationship with Max.

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