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"Polar explorer Jarvis (Mawson: Life and Death in Antarctica, 2008, etc.)
takes on the re-creation of one of the most difficult treks imaginable.
Trying to "double" Ernest Shackleton's (1874-1922) desperate trip 800
nautical miles across the Southern Ocean in a 23-foot boat followed by a
35 kilometer trek across South Georgia's heavily glaciated mountains
requires a tight team with a strong leader. Shackleton had no choice as
he altered his planned adventure of crossing Antarctica on foot from the
Weddell Sea coast to the Ross Sea. After his ship, the Endurance, was
trapped in the ice for more than a year, Shackleton set off in a
reconfigured lifeboat with five men in search of rescue. It was the
greatest survival journey of all time. After he was "asked by
Shackleton's granddaughter to undertake this journey and was inspired to
want to do it as the greatest survival story of the heroic era of
exploration," the author's attempt to repeat this desperate journey
began with finding sponsors, which took three years. The author was
lucky in finding TV sponsors, although the trek was limited by filming
requirements. They also had to travel three months before the period
Shackleton's crew did due to permit requirements. The story of their
journey is bone-chilling at the least and breathtakingly frightening.
There are certain elements that will confuse nonsailors and nonclimbers,
particularly terms never explained--e.g., katabatic winds, nunatak and
bergschrund. The author's description of icy seas soaking the crew as
they tried to sleep like sardines in the hold is not reading for the
claustrophobic. Surely it was difficult enough to attempt this voyage,
but as they accomplished it without modern (waterproof) clothing or
navigational aids, it was a most remarkable feat. A well-written,
compelling read begging for a warm fireside and a hot cup of cocoa" (Kirkus Reviews)
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