The old man hooked a giant marlin in the book "The Old Man and the Sea" by Ernest Hemingway.
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the sea bird circle the schools of fish and the old man knows where it is
In "The Old Man and the Sea," the fish lurches because it is trying to break free from the fishing line attached to it. The fish is caught by the old man after a long and arduous battle, demonstrating the struggle between man and nature.
The fish caught in "The Old Man and the Sea" is a giant marlin. It is a massive, powerful fish that the old man, Santiago, battles with for days as he struggles to reel it in.
The old man had gone 84 days without catching a fish.
The old man in The Old Man and the Sea debates whether killing the big fish is a sin because he both admires the fish's strength and beauty, but also recognizes the necessity of catching it for his survival. He struggles with the idea of killing something noble, but ultimately justifies it as part of the natural order and his duty as a fisherman.
The book is called One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish. by the one the only docter Seuss
Tuna