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Icebound | 
enlarge | Author: Leonard F. Guttridge Publisher: Berkley Trade Category: Book
List Price: $14.95 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $14.94 (100%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 1059940
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 352 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.1 x 0.9
ISBN: 0425181782 Dewey Decimal Number: 910.091632 EAN: 9780425181782 ASIN: 0425181782
Publication Date: December 1, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Help save a tree. Buy all your used books from Green Earth Books. Read -> Recycle -> Reuse!
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| Editorial Reviews:
Book Description "On all levels, not least as a psychological tale of polar exploration, Icebound is a book well worth reading." (The New York Times Book Review)
On July 8, 1879, thirty-three men set off from San Francisco on the small sailing ship Jeannette planning to reach the North Pole and return. Their ship became trapped in the pack ice for two years and the survivors were forced to trek on foot across the ice to Siberia. This is their remarkable true story.
"Leonard Guttridge has performed a valuable service in setting the record straight. More to the point, however, he has told a gripping tale uncommonly well." (The Washington Post)
"This is a dramatic story and Guttridge tells it well. He has uncovered some intriguing new information, including the reason the expedition's full story was never revealed." (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
"A beautifully executed narrative of sacrifice for science's sake. Guttridge has researched the story well and spices it up with the gossipy details that made life on the ship the stuff of Victorian soap opera." (Kirkus Reviews)
"Guttridge unfolds a gripping story of suspense and adventure. He has ferreted out the facts about the Jeannette and the ship's company, and the colorful characters abound." (Publishers Weekly)
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| Customer Reviews:
Author overstates case of "conspiracy" in story of lost ship December 23, 2003 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
This was the third nautical disaster book I read in the last couple of years, after Caroline Alexander's "The Endurance" and Nathaniel Philbrick's "Heart of the Sea". I might have liked this better if I'd read it first, but it doesn't compare to Alexander and Philbrick's better-written, more gripping books. (I now realize I only got the book because I confused it with Jennifer Niven's "Ice Master".)The Jeannette sailed in 1879 hoping to reach the North Pole via the Bering Strait. The voyage was based on a disastrous theory then in vogue that a warm current from the Pacific flowed through the Bering and created a temperate, ice-free zone around the Pole. The Jeannette was quickly trapped in the ice, where it remained for two winters until the ice crushed the boat. The crew tried to make the Siberian shore in three lifeboats, which became separated (after dragging the boats a long distance across pack ice). One boat foundered in a gale, and all but two members of another boat died of starvation and exposure. Guttridge wildly overplays his claims of a "conspiracy" to keep the true story submerged. Over the course a couple of years in the ice, people got on each other's nerves and some petty arguments intensified. This is hardly shocking. Did Capt. DeLong underutilize the half-blinded but hale Officer Danenhower during the ice crossing? Was DeLong too harsh toward the meteorologist Collins? Did engineer Melville wait too long in the village of Zemovialach before going to Bulun to start the search for DeLong's party? Perhaps, but the book never provides any reason to think that the death toll would have been any less otherwise. Guttridge's conspiracy seems mostly an attempt by the Navy to respect the dead by not publicizing the squabbles between crew members. The plodding pacing isn't helped by devoting chapters to DeLong's courtship with his wife and the provisioning of the ship. (1=poor 2=mediocre 3=pretty good 4=very good 5=phenomenal)
Plodding narrative diminishes the amazing story March 26, 2003 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Pedestrian prose abounds in this tale of an astonishing adventure that has messages for everyone. How vanity and position will cover the truth. How armchair theoreticians do not imagine their speculative webs will claim human lives. How foolish rivalries within the military will cost lives. How the dead are easily blamed whenever convenient. How reputations can be preserved or enhanced by judicious truth telling and equally judicious truth avoiding. How politics affects everything that happens in Washington, and pious politicians can mouth words that they know are a lie, all the while claiming to be "for the children" or some such [slop.] No, this isn't today's news, but the unknown story of a very early, very poorly planned, polar expedition. No need for a summary, it is already here. But this book tells a tale of amazing endurance and staggering bravery that shames those of us sitting in warm houses with tennis elbow or a sore throat. What man can accomplish is truly astounding. I wish the author had included a few maps of the locations; these are not easy places to locate in an atlas. And the spare writing wrings some of the joy from it; I had to remind myself of just what an amazing tale this was. I don't want shrieking, but the laconic style diminishes a tale of heroism rarely seen. A worthy read.
Another Fine Arctic Adventure Tinged with Politica Intrigue January 4, 2002 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
Icebound (The Jeannette Expedition's Quest for the North Pole) is not quite as exciting as the same author's, Leonard F. Guttridge, book The Ghosts of Cape Sabine. But this should still satisfy those seeking another chance to spend some time in an arctic adventure (even on this chilly winter days) and will only dissappoint those who seek a hint of cannibalism with their tale. This book has all the other usual elements of these stores, though, including betrayal, heroism, scientic stupidity, and, most of all, sheer perseverance in the face of insurmountable obstacles. This book also has a little political subterfuge to add to the mix. Another exciting re-addition to the polar canon.
Well-Written Account of Enthralling, IncredibleTrue Story July 27, 2000 15 out of 17 found this review helpful
Leonard Guttridge has managed to recreate with astonishing accuracy truly one of the most incredible stories of human endurance that I have ever known. I can only wonder why this story has not found its way onto the silver screen. Presenting real-life facts that need no embellishment, Mr. Guttridge paints an enthralling picture of the enormous hardships endured by thirty-three men trapped in the artic in the late 19th century. These men had set sail from San Francisco in the "Jeanette," a small ship by today's standards, in search of the North Pole, where they hoped to find an warm, ice-free polar sea. However, several set-backs caused them to leave later in the year than intially planned, causing the Jeanette and her crew to become caught in the pack ice of the arctic ocean. After spending two winters trapped aboard their tiny prison, suffering through many shipboard ordeals, the Jeanette sank in the treacherous, frigid waters. The crew then for months made their way over ice and open water in horrendous weather. Some perished in the journey and some made it to land in northern Siberia. More died of exposure and starvation, lost in the maze-like delta of the Lena River, while miraculously some made it to civilation and safety. (This knowledge does not spoil the ending of the book, as these facts are made known to the reader early in the tome). The story of these men would be incredible if it happened today, with all of our modern equipment, but is even more so given the relatively primitive means at hand in the 1880s. Not only is this work a great story about some very courageous and determined men, but it is a reflection of the determination and heroism under extreme circumstances embodied in many persons of that era - characteristics that many feel lacking today. Furthermore, this is a poinant reminder of just how strong is man's will to survive.
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