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I just finished "South" by Sir Ernest Shackleton, which is his "official" version of the Endurance Expedition. It is written like a trip jounal, which I liked; my wife didn't like this style as much. All in all, it is a fantastic read and, through his style, really makes plain the extent of privation and suffering that his crew went through between 1914 and 1916. What I found interesting is that his entire crew, once rescued, was eager to get back to England so they could join in the War.

 

Very good read; I recommend it highly.

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Posted

The journals of Lewis and Clark are pretty interesting, too. You might not want to read the whole thing, but the Mandan's were pretty cool, their encounters with grizzly bears were exciting, and it is fun to read about how they spent an entire winter complaining about having to eat salmon.

Posted

I watched the story of similarly fated expedition to Alaska in 1914 last night on the Discovery channel (i think) Anybody see that and/or recall the name of it. I'm drawing a blank. I'm not going anywhere by boat that involves that much ice!

Posted

"The Long Walk" by Slavomir Rawicz. Polish POWs escape Siberian prison camp and walk across Gobi Desert and Himalayas to India. I got my copy at the gear store in Gold Bar.

Posted
You'd like "Mawson's Will" a lot then too. bigdrink.gif

 

Name is familiar, was he on one of Scott's expeditions?

 

Mawson was an Australian geologist who went to explore for the motherland and came back ooo.gif. But you are supposed to save that book for a long trip to a cold, kinda depressing place ...

 

off the top of my head among other exploration books I liked: the arctic grail by pierre berton, the barren ground by mowatt(i think), great exploration hoaxes by dave roberts.

Posted
You'd like "Mawson's Will" a lot then too. bigdrink.gif

 

Name is familiar, was he on one of Scott's expeditions?

 

Mawson was an Australian geologist who went to explore for the motherland and came back ooo.gif. But you are supposed to save that book for a long trip to a cold, kinda depressing place ...

 

off the top of my head among other exploration books I liked: the arctic grail by pierre berton, the barren ground by mowatt(i think), great exploration hoaxes by dave roberts.

 

j_b (aka, "leftwing wacko") tongue.gif - what are those three books about? I'm looking for new reading material.

Posted

arctic grail: the entire history of the search for the Northwest passage. a thick, well-researched book

 

barren ground: early overland expeditions to the mouth of the Mackenzie river (british and american) to discover the Northwest passage, pretty grim

 

exploration hoaxes: short stories about expeditions all over the world (cook at Denali, Peary and the north pole, the source of hte nile, adams on the colorado). well written and quite enjoyable.

Posted

The only book I found more amazing that "THE LONG WALK" Is a book called "WE DIE ALONE" it is so incredible that you will not ever underestimate the will to survive again . My girlfriend found both books on Amazon. blush.gif

Posted
"The Long Walk" by Slavomir Rawicz. Polish POWs escape Siberian prison camp and walk across Gobi Desert and Himalayas to India. I got my copy at the gear store in Gold Bar.

 

Wasn't that Siberian Prison camp run by Sexual Chocolate's great uncle, or somethin'?

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