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"The Worst Journey in the World" recounts Robert Falcon Scott's
ill-fated expedition to the South Pole. Apsley Cherry-Garrard?the
youngest member of Scott's team and one of three men to make and
survive the notorious Winter Journey?draws on his firsthand
experiences as well as the diaries of his compatriots to create a
stirring and detailed account of Scott's legendary expedition.
Cherry himself would be among the search party that discovered the
corpses of Scott and his men, who had long since perished from
starvation and brutal cold. It is through Cherry's insightful
narrative and keen descriptions that Scott and the other members of
the expedition are fully memorialized.
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The Iliad (Paperback)
Homer, Caroline Alexander
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R623
R550
Discovery Miles 5 500
Save R73 (12%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Iliad is still the greatest poem about war that our culture has
ever produced. For a hundred generations, poets and thinkers in the
West have pored over, retold and argued about the events described
in this martial epic, even when direct knowledge of it was lost.
Various empires have admired it as a book that in telling the story
of the siege of Troy also extols the warrior ethic, and teaches the
young how to die well. Yet the figure at the heart of the epic, the
consummate warrior Achilles, is a brooding, controversial hero. He
is a fierce critic of those who have started this war and allowed
it to drag on, consuming soldiers and civilians alike.
Disconcertingly, The Iliad portrays war as a catastrophe that
destroys cities, orphans children and wrecks whole societies.
Caroline Alexander's extraordinary book is not about any of the
traditional concerns that have occupied classicists for centuries.
It is simpler and more radical than that. In her words, 'This book
is about what the Iliad is about; this book is about what the Iliad
says of war.'
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The Iliad (Paperback)
Homer; Translated by Caroline Alexander
1
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R346
R292
Discovery Miles 2 920
Save R54 (16%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Read this stunning translation of Homer's great war epic, the
legendary tale of honour, love, loss and revenge during the fall of
the city of Troy. High on Olympus, Zeus and the assembled deities
look down on the world of men, to the city of Troy where a bitter
and bloody war has dragged into its tenth year, and a quarrel rages
between a legendary warrior and his commander. Greek ships decay,
men languish, exhausted, and behind the walls of Troy a desperate
people await the next turn of fate. This is the Iliad: an ancient
story of enduring power; magnetic characters defined by stirring
and momentous speeches; a panorama of human lives locked in a
heroic struggle beneath a mischievous or indifferent heaven. Above
all, this is a tale of the devastation, waste and pity of war.
Caroline Alexander's virtuoso translation captures the rhythms and
energy of Homer's original Greek while making the text as
accessible as possible to a modern reader, accompanied by extensive
extra material to provide a background to the poem. The result of
3,000 years of story-telling, Homer's epic tale of the fall of Troy
has resonated with every age and every human conflict: this is the
Iliad at its most electrifying and vital.
In August 1914, days before the outbreak of the First World War, the renowned explorer Ernest Shackleton and a crew of twenty-seven set sail for the South Atlantic in pursuit of the last unclaimed prize in the history of exploration: the first crossing on foot of the Antarctic continent. Weaving a treacherous path through the freezing Weddell Sea, they had come within eighty-five miles of their destination when their ship, Endurance, was trapped fast in the ice pack. Soon the ship was crushed like matchwood, leaving the crew stranded on the floes. Their ordeal would last for twenty months, and they would make two near-fatal attempts to escape by open boat before their final rescue.
Drawing upon previously unavailable sources, Caroline Alexander gives us a riveting account of Shackleton's expedition--one of history's greatest epics of survival. And she presents the astonishing work of Frank Hurley, the Australian photographer whose visual record of the adventure has never before been published comprehensively. Together, text and image re-create the terrible beauty of Antarctica, the awful destruction of the ship, and the crew's heroic daily struggle to stay alive, a miracle achieved largely through Shackleton's inspiring leadership.
The survival of Hurley's remarkable images is scarcely less miraculous: The original glass plate negatives, from which most of the book's illustrations are superbly reproduced, were stored in hermetically sealed cannisters that survived months on the ice floes, a week in an open boat on the polar seas, and several more months buried in the snows of a rocky outcrop called Elephant Island. Finally Hurley was forced to abandon his professional equipment; he captured some of the most unforgettable images of the struggle with a pocket camera and three rolls of Kodak film.
Published in conjunction with the American Museum of Natural History's landmark exhibition on Shackleton's journey, The Endurance thrillingly recounts one of the last great adventures in the Heroic Age of exploration--perhaps the greatest of them all.
"Spectacular and constantly surprising."
-Ken Burns
Written with the authority of a scholar and the vigor of a
bestselling narrative historian, "The War That Killed Achilles" is
a superb and utterly timely presentation of one of the timeless
stories of Western civilization. As she did in "The Endurance" and
"The Bounty," "New York Times" bestselling author Caroline
Alexander has taken apart a narrative we think we know and put it
back together in a way that lets us see its true power. In the
process, she reveals the intended theme of Homer's masterwork-the
tragic lessons of war and its enduring devastation.
Has history been wrong for 200 years? Read the startling truth
about the mutiny on the Bounty, its characters, causes, and
aftermath. Television rights are now in development with Ridley
Scott's Scott Free Productions. More than two centuries after
Master's Mate Fletcher Christian led a mutiny against Lieutenant
William Bligh on a small, armed transport vessel called Bounty, the
true story of this enthralling adventure has become obscured by the
legend. Combining vivid characterization and deft storytelling,
Caroline Alexander shatters the centuries-old myths surrounding
this story. She brilliantly shows how, in a desperate attempt to
save one man from the gallows and another from ignominy, two
powerful families came together and began to create the version of
history we know today. The true story of the mutiny on the Bounty
is an epic of duty and heroism, pride and power, and the
assassination of a brave man's honor at the dawn of the Romantic
age.
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