Experience in the polar explorer's own words, Ernest Shackleton's
thrilling yet ill-fated expedition on the ship Endurance, the wreck of
which was discovered off the coast of Antarctica in March 2022.
In 1914, Ernest Shackleton announced an ambitious plan to lead the
first trek across Antarctica via the South Pole. The expedition would
prove fraught with adventure--and peril.
This handsome, breathtakingly illustrated edition, first published
in 2016, is presented in paperback to coincide with the 100th
anniversary of the original publication in 1919 and features:
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The remarkable tale of the treacherous expedition, told in
Shackleton's own words
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Images by expedition photographer Frank Hurley
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Modern color photography of the fauna and vistas the men encountered
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Long-lost photos taken by the expedition's Ross Sea Party that were
discovered in 2013
The expedition's story begins on the eve of World War I, when the ship
Endurance departed England with Shackleton and his team of six men.
The plan was to travel 1,800 miles across the icy continent from the
Atlantic side, while a second team aboard the Aurora, would reach
Antarctica's Pacific side and lay out supply depots for the advancing
team. As the Endurance approached the continent, however, it became
hopelessly locked in an ice floe, beginning a series of harrowing
travails.
Over a century later and despite extreme conditions, the wreck of the
Endurance was found in the Weddell Sea by a mission dubbed
Endurance22, launched by the Falklands Maritime Heritage Trust and led
by polar geographer Dr. John Shears. Though the discovery of the
Endurance is not covered in this edition, Shackleton's account of
the expedition and the photography within are a prerequisite for
understanding the full story behind this famed shipwreck.
Today considered an adventure survival classic, South is the true
story of a thrilling polar expedition. Never before has Shackleton's
lively prose been so extensively and stunningly illustrated.