polar regions |
Aftersleep Books
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The Worst Journey in the WorldThe following report compares books using the SERCount Rating (base on the result count from the search engine). |
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Aftersleep Books - 2005-06-20 07:00:00 | © Copyright 2004 - www.aftersleep.com () | sitemap | top |
The book has two separate climaxes. The first is the "Winter Journey", which Cherry-Garrard took with Birdie Bowers and Bill Wilson, to recover Emperor penguin eggs, which were then (erroneously) thought to be scientifically important. Cherry-Garrard's prose is archetypically English, restrained and transparent; but his language almost fails him here. Only his understated style tells you how bad it must be for him to say of an Antarctic hurricane that hit them: "The earth was torn in pieces: the indescribably fury and roar of it all cannot be imagined." Later he makes it clear that for him there are no words that can convey it. This journey is, despite what comes later in the book, in some ways the most memorable chapter. It took five weeks, in Antarctic winter darkness. A temperature of -40 when they camped was a warm night for them. They lost their tent--certain death--blown away in a three-day hurricane, and miraculously found it again. It's no use; I can't give you an idea of it in this review; all I can do is tell you to read this chapter, if you won't read the whole book--you will never forget it.
The second climax is of course the story of Scott's expedition. Five men died; Edgar Evans of scurvy; Titus Oates, who not long before the end, with horribly gangrenous feet, walked into the blizzard to die in the hope that the party would be less burdened without him, and Scott, Wilson and Bowers, found dead in their tent by Cherry-Garrard and the others of the search party eight months later, only eleven miles from a depot that might have saved them. Cherry-Garrard went with them as far as the top of the Beardmore Glacier, and tells the story from that point on using various diaries and journals of the rest of the party. Some of the secondary stories are in themselves amazing feats of heroism and endurance, such as Crean, who walked thirty five miles non-stop alone in the terrible cold to bring medical help for Lieutenant Evans, dying of scurvy.
The one flaw is the maps; I wished for more of them, and more detail, though the two main journeys are covered well enough. I don't agree with those reviewers who found the book ponderous, though; it's detailed, but well-written. I found little I wanted to skip except the occasional list of stores.
If you want the most recent historiography, analyzing why Scott's expedition failed while Amundsen's succeeded with so little trouble, you may want to go elsewhere. Here you'll find the record of a contemporary, a polar expert, passionate and sincere. An unforgettable book.