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Books > Sport & Leisure > Travel & holiday > Travel writing > Expeditions
To celebrate the centenary of one of the most exciting expeditions
of the Heroic Age of Antarctic exploration comes "Nimrod
Illustrated". The book is a remarkable collage of expedition
photographs, paintings and ephemera in a deliberate reminiscence of
the expedition scrapbooks kept by so many of the expedition
participants at the time. Many of the images are rarely seen, if
ever before published, whilst others are better known.Together with
quotations from the diaries of expedition participants, they tell
the story of the British Antarctic Expedition 1907-1909 which saw
the first use of ponies and motor cars in the Antarctic; achieved
the first ascent of Mount Erebus; achieved the first attainment of
the South Magnetic Pole; and, took Shackleton within 100 miles of
the South Geographic Pole to attain a dramatic new 'Farthest South'
record. This was the expedition that made Shackleton's name as an
explorer and for which he was awarded his knighthood. Edited by Dr.
D. M. Wilson, "Nimrod Illustrated" is a treat for anyone interested
in Shackleton, the Antarctic, polar exploration or the atmosphere
of the Edwardian age. It is a part of the well regarded series
commenced with "Discovery Illustrated: Pictures from Captain
Scott's First Antarctic Expedition" (2001).
'As I studied the maps, one thing about them captured my
imagination - Across this blank space was written one challenging
word, "Unexplored"' In 1937 two of the twentieth century's greatest
explorers set off to explore an unknown area of the Himalaya, the
breath-taking Shaksgam mountains. With a team of surveyors and
Sherpas, Eric Shipton and H.W. Tilman located and mapped the land
around K2, the second-highest mountain in the world. It was their
greatest venture, and one that paved the way for all future
mountaineering in that area of the Himalaya. For Shipton and
Tilman, exploration was everything, with a summit a welcome bonus,
and Blank on the Map is the book that best captures their spirit of
adventure. With an observant eye and keen sense of humour, Shipton
tells how the expedition entered the unknown Shaksgam mountains,
crossing impenetrable gorges, huge rivers and endless snow fields.
There's a very human element to Shipton's dealings with his Sherpa
friends, and with his Balti porters, some of whom were helpful,
while some were less so. The expedition uncovers traces of ancient
cultures and visits vibrant modern civilisations living during the
last days of the British Empire. Only when all supplies are
exhausted, their clothes in tatters and all equipment lost do the
men finally return home. A mountain exploration classic.
Over 9,000 feet up on the top of Mount Roraima is a twenty-five
mile square plateau, at the point where Guyana's border meets
Venezuela and Brazil. In 1973, Scottish mountaineering legend
Hamish MacInnes alongside climbing notoriety Don Whillans, Mo
Anthoine and Joe Brown trekked through dense rainforest and swamp,
and climbed the sheer overhanging sandstone wall of the great prow
in order to conquer this Conan Doyle fantasy summit. As one of the
last unexplored corners of the world, in order to reach the foot of
the prow the motley yet vastly experienced expedition trudged
through a saturated world of bizarre vegetation, fantastically
contorted slime-coated trees and deep white mud; a world dominated
by bushmaster snakes, scorpions and giant bird-eating spiders. This
wasn't the end of it, however. The stately prow itself posed
extreme technical complications: the rock was streaming with water,
and the few-and-far-between ledges were teeming with
scorpion-haunted bromeliads. This was not a challenge to be taken
lightly. However, if anyone was going to do it, it was going to be
this group of UK climbing pioneers, backed by The Observer,
supported by the Guyanan Government, and accompanied by a BBC
camera team, their mission was very much in the public eye. Climb
to the Lost World is a story of discovering an alien world of
tortured rock formations, sunken gardens and magnificent
waterfalls, combined with the trials and tribulations of day-to-day
expedition life. MacInnes' dry humour and perceptive observations
of his companions, flora and fauna relay the story of this first
ascent with passion and in true explorer style.
Land of Tempest reveals Eric Shipton at his best - writing with
enthusiasm and humour about his explorations in Patagonia in the
1950s and 1960s. He is an astute observer of nature and the human
spirit, and this account of his travels is infused with with his
own zest for discovery and the joy of camaraderie. Undaunted by
hardship or by injury, Shipton and his team attempt to cross one of
the great ice caps in Patagonia. It's impossible not to marvel at
his determination, resilience and appetite for travel and
adventure, be it climbing snow-clad mountains, or walking in
forested foothills. Shipton takes a reader with him on his travels,
and the often-inhospitable places he visits are a stark contrast to
the warmth of the people he encounters. Land of Tempest is
essential reading for anyone who loves nature, mountains, climbing,
adventure or simply the joy of discovering unknown places.
`If I could choose a place to die, it would be in the mountains.’
Clouds from Both Sides is the autobiography of Julie Tullis, the
first British woman to climb an 8,000-metre peak – Broad Peak –
and the first to reach the summit of K2, the world’s
second-highest mountain. A truly remarkable woman, Julie describes
her early days in a London disrupted by World War II; her family
life, climbing, teaching and living by the sandstone outcrops of
High Rocks and Harrison’s Rocks in Tunbridge Wells, Kent; and her
experience as a high-level mountaineer and filmmaker. Tullis
demonstrates her determination and self-discipline through training
to black-belt standard in both judo and aikido, and never allows
financial concerns to keep her away from the high mountains – a
place where she felt at peace. Filled with vivid accounts of
frostbite, avalanches, snow blindness and exhilaration alongside
her climbing partner Kurt Diemberger, Clouds from Both Sides takes
us to Yosemite, Nanga Parbat, Everest and K2. First published in
1986 before her death, and with an additional chapter written by
Peter Gillman documenting Tullis’s final, fated expedition to K2,
this story is as relevant and awe inspiring today as it ever was.
Tullis’s achievements are timeless and her attitudes and opinions
far ahead of their time. Clouds from Both Sides is a tribute to the
memory of an inspirational woman determined to strive for her
dreams, an extraordinary account of her adventures and an
exhilarating testament to her courage.
In 1982, following the relaxation of access restrictions to Tibet,
six climbers set off for the Himalaya to explore the little-known
Shishapangma massif in Tibet. Dealing with a chaotic build-up and
bureaucratic obstacles so huge they verged on comical, the
mountaineers gained access to Shishapangma's unclimbed South-West
Face where Doug Scott, Alex MacIntyre and Roger Baxter-Jones made
one of the most audacious and stylish Himalayan climbs ever. First
published in 1984 as The Shishapangma Expedition, Shishapangma won
the first ever Boardman Tasker Prize for Mountain Literature. Told
through a series of diary-style entries from all the climbers
involved, Shishapangma reveals the difficult nature of Himalayan
decision-making, mountaineering tactics and climbing relationships.
Tense and candid, the six writers see every event differently,
reacting in different ways and pulling no punches in their opinions
of the other mountaineers - quite literally at one point.
Nonetheless, the climbers, at the peak of their considerable powers
and experience, completed an extremely committing enterprise. The
example set by their fine climb survives and several new routes
(all done in alpine style) have now been added to this magnificent
face. For well-trained climbers, such ascents are fast and
efficient, but the consequences of error, misjudgement or bad luck
can be terminal and, sadly, soon afterwards two of the participants
were struck down in mountaineering accidents - MacIntyre hit by
stonefall on Annapurna's South Face and Baxter-Jones being caught
by an ice avalanche on the Aiguille du Triolet. In addition their
support climber, Nick Prescott, died in a Chamonix hospital from an
altitude-induced ailment. Shishapangma is a gripping first-hand
account of the intense reality of high-altitiude alpinism.
The Next Horizon, the second volume in Chris Bonington's
autobiography after I Chose to Climb, picks up his story from 1962
and relates his subsequent adventures as a mountaineer,
photographer, journalist and expedition leader alongside eminent
climbers including Doug Scott and Don Whillans, throughout an
extraordinary decade of adversity, thrill and discovery. The book
opens with a journey to Chile to climb the Central Tower of Paine.
Bonington then recounts his ascents across the globe; from the Old
Man of Hoy in Scotland, the Eiger in Switzerland, to Sangay in
Ecuador to name but a few. He concludes in the summer of 1972 with
preparations for his ambitious autumn Everest expedition. This
revealing narrative of Chris Bonington's experiences provides an
insight into the charismatic generation of climbing personalities
with whom he travelled, as well as his development into the
celebrity we know today.
No Place to Fall is Victor Saunders' follow up to his Boardman
Tasker Prize winning debut book Elusive Summits. Covering three
expeditions in Nepal, the Karakoram and the Kumaon, each shares the
exhilaration of attempting new alpine-style routes on terrifyingly
committing mountains. In 1989 Victor Saunders and Steve Sustad
completed a difficult route on the West Face of Makalu II, only to
be brought to a storm-bound halt above 7,000 metres while
descending. Without food or bivouac gear, they endured a tortuous
descent after a night in the open. Two years later the pair were
with a small team in the Hunza valley exploring elusive access to a
giant hidden pillar on the unvisited South-East Face of Ultar, one
of the highest and most shapely of the world's unclimbed peaks. In
1992 Victor Saunders was part of a joint Indian-British team
climbing various peaks in the Panch Chuli range. A happy and
successful expedition narrowly avoided ending in tragedy when
Stephen Venables broke both legs in a fall on the descent from
Panch Chuli V and Chris Bonington survived another fall going to
his aid. The dramatic evacuation of Venables, in which the author
took a major part, forms an exciting climax to a story of
cutting-edge, alpine-style climbing in the world's highest
mountains. No Place to Fall offers enviable mountain exploration,
enriched by sharing the lives of the mountain peoples along the
way. Victor Saunders casts a perceptive, if bemused, eye over his
fellow climbers and reflects on the calculation of risk that drives
them back year after year to chance their lives in high places.
A harrowing tale of human intelligence pitted against the forces of
nature. With prospectors, trappers, and whalers pouring into
northwestern Canada, the North West Mounted Police were dispatched
to the newest frontier to maintain patrols, protect indigenous
peoples, and enforce laws in the North. In carrying out their
duties, these intrepid men endured rigorous and dangerous
conditions. On December 21, 1910, a four-man patrol left Fort
McPherson, Northwest Territories, heading for Dawson City, Yukon, a
distance of 670 kilometres. They never arrived. The harrowing drama
of their 52-day struggle to survive is an account of courageous
failure, one that will resonate strongly in its depiction of human
intelligence pitted against the implacable forces of nature. Based
on Fitzgerald’s daily journal records, Death Wins in the Arctic
tells of their tremendous courage, their willingness to face
unthinkable conditions, and their dedication to fulfill the oath
they took. Throughout their ordeal, issues of conservation, law
enforcement, Aboriginal peoples, and sovereignty emerge, all of
which are global concerns today.
Throughout history, a handful of unusually driven individuals have
been inspired to explore the limits of the known world, inspiring
us and changing our perceptions of our planet through their
courageous adventures. What is it that makes these men and women
risk their lives in desperate, often fatal efforts to discover
distant and inaccessible places? Robin Hanbury-Tenison, himself one
of the most distinguished explorers of the 20th century, looks at
the greatest of their kind in history, bringing their experiences
to life in vivid and compelling anecdotes and drawing on their own
first-hand accounts. Among the explorers he features are some who
are well known, like James Cook and David Livingstone, and some
less so, such as Herodotus, the first European to record an
expedition and Nain Singh, who walked huge distances to map the
forbidden lands of Tibet, counting every pace. And he asks: what
was it, and is it, that motivates these unusual people? And how
have they enriched our world through their adventures?
SS Terra Nova was most famous for being the vessel to carry the
ill-fated 1910 polar expedition led by Robert Falcon Scott, but the
story of this memorable ship, built in wood to enable flexibility
in the ice, continued until 1943, when she sank off Greenland. This
newly designed and updated edition presents the definitive
illustrated account of one of the classic polar exploration ships
of the 'heroic age'. Put together from accounts recorded by the men
who sailed in her, it tells the sixty-year history of a ship built
by a famous Scottish shipbuilding yard, in the nineteenth-century
days of whaling and sealing before coal gas and electricity
replaced animal oils.
As a boy growing up near Liverpool in the 1950s, Andrew Lees would
visit the docks with his father to watch the ships from Brazil
unload their exotic cargo of coffee, cotton bales, molasses, cocoa
- the ships' names and goods noted down in loving detail in his
exercise book. One day, his father gave him a dog-eared book called
Exploration Fawcett. The book told the true story of
Lieutenant-Colonel Percy Fawcett, a British explorer who in 1925
had gone in search of a lost city in the Amazon, and never
returned. The riveting story of Fawcett's encounters with deadly
animals and hostile tribes, his mission to discover an Atlantean
civilization, and the many who lost their own lives when they went
in search of him, inspired the young Lees to believe that there
were still earthly places where one could 'fall off the edge'.Lees
travelled to Manaus in Fawcett's footsteps. After a time-bending
psychedelic experience in the forest, he understood that his
yearning for the imaginary Brazil of his boyhood, like Fawcett's
search for an earthly paradise, was a nostalgia for what never was.
Part travelogue, part memoir, Lees paints a portrait of an elusive
Brazil, and a flawed explorer whose doomed mission ruined lives.
The story of John Devoy's 1876 "Catalpa" rescue is a tale of
heroism, creativity, and the triumph of independent spirit in
pursuit of freedom. The daily log on board the whaling ship
"Catalpa" begins with the typical recount of a crew intact and a
spirit unfettered, but such quiet words deceive the truth of the
audacious enterprise that came to be known as one of the most
important rescues in Irish American history. John Devoy's men
rescued six Irish political prisoners from the Australian coast,
allowing millions of fellow Irishmen and American-Fenians, many of
whom secretly financed the dangerous plot, to draw courage from the
newly exiled prisoners.
Philip Fennell and Marie King tell the story from John Devoy's
own records and the ship's logbooks. John Devoy's "Catalpa"
Expedition includes an introduction by Terry Golway and the
personal diaries, letters, and reports from John Devoy and his
men.
In 1953, Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay reached the summit of
Mount Everest. They climbed from the south, from Nepal, via the
Khumbu Glacier - a route first pioneered in 1951 by a
reconnaissance expedition led by Eric Shipton. Everest 1951 is the
account of this expedition. It was the first to approach the
mountain from the south side, it pioneered a route through the
Khumbu icefall and it was the expedition on which Hillary set foot
on Everest for the first time. Everest 1951 is a short but vitally
important read for anybody with any interest in mountaineering or
in Everest. The 1951 Everest Expedition marked the public highpoint
of Shipton's mountaineering fame. Key information was discovered
and the foundations laid for future success. Despite this,
Shipton's critics felt he had a 'lack of trust' and thus failed to
match the urgent mood of the period. Despite having been on more
Everest expeditions than any man alive, he was 'eased' out of the
crucial leadership role in 1953 and so missed the huge public
acclaim given to Hillary, Tenzing Norgay and John Hunt after their
historic success.
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At a time when the greatest mountains in the greatest ranges had
been climbed by numerous routes, collected like stamps and written
about extensively, Victor Saunders and his friends relished the
exploration of the slightly lower, slightly humbler, but often more
aesthetically satisfying and no less testing summits in the 6,000-
and 7,000-metre range. With thousands of unclimbed peaks in the
Karakoram and Himalaya to choose from, these were ripe fruit for
the committed mountaineers of the day. In his
Boardman-Tasker-winning Elusive Summits, Victor Saunders describes
four expeditions to the Karakoram, to Uzum Brakk, Bojohaghur
Duanasir, Rimo and the stunning Spantik. Battling crevasses and
violent weather, injured climbers and dropped rucksacks, Saunders
and his friends make a string of exciting and difficult ascents.
Saunders communicates the highs and lows of expedition life with
relish, good humour, and a keen eye for the idiosyncratic among his
companions. His first book, Elusive Summits, is a wonderful
celebration of the sheer exhilaration that comes from the hardest
level of alpine-style exploration in the Karakoram.
Frederick Courteney Selous (1851-1917) was a British explorer,
officer, hunter, and conservationist, famous for his work in
south-east Africa. In early 1882 he embarked on an eleven-year
expedition to record species that, to his great sadness, were
becoming endangered. First published in 1893, these revealing
memoirs document the wildlife, landscapes and people that
characterised his journey. Through vivid descriptions and extensive
illustrations, he recalls exhilarating adventures with lions,
leopards, hyenas and crocodiles, recounts challenging treks across
lakes and mountains, and describes hostile - and at times barbaric
- encounters with native peoples. Detailed accounts of hunting
endeavours, colonial institutions, and commercial enterprises such
as gold mining, also feature in this study, which provides a unique
and diverse perspective on Africa in the late nineteenth century.
Insightful and revealing, Selous' experiences remain of enduring
interest to geographers, anthropologists, zoologists, and all those
interested in African history and culture.
The immense 18th-century scientific journey, variously known as the
Second Kamchatka Expedition or the Great Northern Expedition, from
St. Petersburg across Siberia to the coast of North America,
involved over 3,000 people and cost Peter the Great over one-sixth
of his empire's annual revenue. Until now recorded only in academic
works, this 10-year venture, led by the legendary Danish captain
Vitus Bering and including scientists, artists, mariners, soldiers,
and laborers, discovered Alaska, opened the Pacific fur trade, and
led to fame, shipwreck, and "one of the most tragic and ghastly
trials of suffering in the annals of maritime and arctic history."
A fast-paced account of the year Clara Parkes spent transforming a
676-pound bale of fleece into saleable yarn, and the people and
vanishing industry she discovered along the way Join Clara
Parkes on a cross-country adventure and meet a cast of characters
that includes the shepherds, dyers, and countless workers without
whom our knitting needles would be empty, our mills idle, and our
feet woefully cold. Travel the country with her as she meets a
flock of Saxon Merino sheep in upstate New York, tours a scouring
plant in Texas, visits a steamy Maine dyehouse, helps sort freshly
shorn wool on a working farm, and learns how wool fleece is
measured, baled, shipped, and turned into skeins. In pursuit
of the perfect yarn, Parkes describes a brush with the dangers of
opening a bale (they can explode), and her adventures from Maine to
Wisconsin (“the most knitterly state”) and back again; along
the way, she presents a behind-the-scenes look at the spinners,
scourers, genius inventors, and crazy-complex mill machines that
populate the yarn-making industry. By the end of the book, you’ll
be ready to set aside the backyard chickens and add a flock of
sheep instead. Simply put, no other book exists that explores
American culture through the lens of wool.
The first time journalist Jon Lurie meets Jose Perez, the smart,
angry, fifteen-year-old Lakota-Puerto Rican draws blood. Five years
later, both men are floundering. Lurie, now in his thirties, is
newly divorced, depressed, and self-medicating. Jose is embedded in
a haze of women and street feuds. Both lack a meaningful connection
to their cultural roots: Lurie feels an absence of identity as the
son of a Holocaust survivor who is reluctant to talk about her
experience, and for Jose, communal history has been obliterated by
centuries of oppression. Then Lurie hits upon a plan to save them.
After years of admiring the journey described in Eric Arnold
Sevareid's 1935 classic account, Canoeing with the Cree, Lurie
invites Jose to join him in retracing Sevareid's route and
embarking on a mythic two thousand-mile paddle from Breckenridge,
Minnesota, to the Hudson Bay. Faced with plagues of mosquitoes,
extreme weather, suspicious law enforcement officers, tricky border
crossings, and Jose's preference for Kanye West over the great
outdoors, the journey becomes an odyssey of self-discovery.
Acknowledging the erased native histories that Sevareid's
prejudicial account could not perceive, and written in gritty,
honest prose, Canoeing with Jose is a remarkable journey.
This richly illustrated book takes a different angle on Robert E.
Peary's North Pole expedition. By shifting the focus away from the
unanswerable question of whether he truly reached 90 North
Latitude, the authors shed light on equally important stories and
discoveries that arose as a result of the infamous expedition.
Peary's Arctic Quest ventures beyond the well-cited story of
Peary's expedition and uncovers the truth about race relations,
womens' scientific contributions, and climate change that are still
relevant today. Readers will gain a greater appreciation for
Peary's methodical and creative mind, the Inughuit's significant
contributions to Arctic exploration, and the impact of Western
expedition activity on the Inughuit community. The volume will also
feature artifacts, drawings, and historic photographs with
informative captions to tell little-known stories about Peary's
1908-1909 North Pole expedition.
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