Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review
(491 customer reviews) 179 of 185 people found the following review helpful
Incredible,
February 9, 2000 Nathan (Wilmington, DE United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage (Paperback)
This is an absolutely amazing and true accounting of the 1914 Antarctic expedition gone to hell. It is clear that the author did an incredible amount of research, and though this book doesn't read like a novel, its presentation is much more powerful this way, giving a panoramic view of the whole terrible and desperate situation of these men.I don't have any experience even comparable to what these men went through, the closest I've ever come is rowing down the coast of Maine in the summer in a 30 foot pulling boat, and I'll tell you, this guy gets every detail.Anyway, an absolutely incredible look at human endurance, at what a person will go through if he must. I definitely recommend this book to everyone. One note...make sure the version you buy or get at the library has expedition photographer Hurley's photographs in it. Some paperback editions don't, and you're really missing part of the experience without them.
72 of 73 people found the following review helpful
Nothing is so bad that it can't get worse,
August 13, 2002 A. Woodley "Patroness, Janeites, the Austen list" (New Zealand) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage (Paperback)
This book is one of the few exceptional -absolutely execptional- tales of survival and it proves the maxim that nothing is so bad that it can't get worse. But also it proves that you can know the end of a story - it is a well known fact that Shackleton brought all his men through this arduous trial and all survived - and it doesn't spoil the story at all. Truth is not only stranger than fiction, but it is a good deal harder. The bare-bones of the story are that Shackleton and his team left civillisation in 1914 in the Endurance to travel to attempt to reach the South Pole - a trip he had tried and failed by only a couple of hundred miles or so to achive in 1908. Amundsen had already reached the pole first but for Shackleton it was unfinished business. The Endurance had been built to push through the pack ice, but conditions proved too much and it was trapped in pack ice. Summer wore on and there was no escape - the winds were in the wrong direction - then winter hit and they were...Read more
46 of 47 people found the following review helpful
Required Reading for the cynical and jaded,
November 26, 2001 Misha Weidman "mishman" (San Francisco, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage to the Antarctic (Illustrated Edition) (Paperback)
I first became interested in Shackleton's incredible story after seeing photos and a short version of Caroline Alexander's book in the National Geographic a couple of years ago. Since then, I've read and reread Lansing's account, as well as Alexander's, and twice seen the new Butler documentary which incorporates the photos and early film of the expedition's photographer, Frank Hurley.This is quite simply one of the most amazing stories I've ever read. Survival in the face of incredible hardship. Astonishing bravery, persistence, and resourcefulness, all in the face of unimaginable bad luck. This story should have ended in death at least five times. Instead, after 16 (or 20, depending on who you're counting for) months marooned in the antarctic circle, not a single member of Shackleton's crew was lost.Lansing's account is creditable and more interesting than Alexander's, though her book has the better pictures. I'd suggest buying both.