Customer Service - Phone: +852 2989-9147 or Email: sales@shopinhk.com. We deliver to Hong Kong and Macau.
Search:  
Login: Password:  OR 
Hong Kong Online Shopping :: Bookstore :: Travel :: Polar Regions :: South: The Endurance Expedition (Penguin Classics)

  Manufacturers


  Payment Options
We accept Visa, Master Card, transfer to our HSBC account and payment by cheque.

   

South: The Endurance Expedition (Penguin Classics) (0142437794)


Share |

South: The Endurance Expedition (Penguin Classics)
Click to enlarge Click To View Detailed Image(s)
Product ID: 158881
ISBN: 0142437794
ISBN13: 9780142437797

Release Date: 2004-01-27
Publication Date: 2004-01-27
Author(s): Ernest Shackleton
Edition: Reprint
Binding: Paperback
Number of Pages: 416
Publisher: Penguin Classics

Details
 
SKU 0142437794
Weight 0.30 Kgs
Price: HK$120.00

  0%

Stock Details and Delivery
WarehouseStockEstimated Delivery Date
Hong KongNo item(s) available
US WarehouseNo item(s) available
US Warehouse 2No item(s) available
In most cases, your order will be delivered on the dates highlighted above.
Options
 
Quantity Sorry, this product is out of stock and cannot be ordered.

Customers Also Bought

The Worst Journey in the World (Penguin Classics)

Description

Product Description
Veteran explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton's excruciating and inspiring expedition to Antarctica aboard the Endurance has long captured the public imagination. South is his own first-hand account of this epic adventure.

As war clouds darkened over Europe in 1914, a party led by Shackleton set out to make the first crossing of the entire Antarctic continent via the Pole. But their initial optimism was short-lived as ice floes closed around their ship, gradually crushing it and marooning twenty-eight men on the polar ice. Alone in the world's most unforgiving environment, Shackleton and his team began a brutal quest for survival. And as the story of their journey across treacherous seas and a wilderness of glaciers and snow fields unfolds, the scale of their courage and heroism becomes movingly clear.

Editorial Descriptions are usually submitted by the manufacturers, publishers and authors. Contact us if you are one of them, and wish to change the above description.

Reviews

   

Customer feedback

Product rating


Voting

Rate It!


Customer Reviews


Author: Guest
My case of Shackleton Fever finally ended with this book -- the story of the doomed antarctic expedition as seen through the eyes of Shackleton himself. He emerges from these pages as an intelligent man who is modest about his achievements -- but not so modest as to blunt the excitement of his story. This book also gives many additional details of his attempts to rescue his men, and the often-overlooked story of the not-so-lucky supply expedition that awaited him on the far side of the antarctic ice pack. Perhaps the only fault of the book is that its careful narrative strips some of the mystery away from Shackleton's almost superhuman story. After reading 4 books on the subject, I find I still prefer Lancing's original version (see my review). But true Shackleton buffs won't rest easy until they have seen the original silent movie of the same name, including remarkable cinematography by Frank Hurley -- now available on videotape as a mesmerizing 90 minute movie from the dawn of motion pictures.



--Auralgo


Author: Guest
This is one of the best survival/adventure stories that you will ever read. The events which take place during the Imperial Trans Antarctic Expedition of 1914-1917 are re-told by several different points of view and this gives the overall story a multi-faceted persona. The main re-telling of the story of the ENDURANCE is told primarily from Shackleton's point of view and re-affirmed through diary notes of his mates. His point of view is very straight-forward. He doesn't dwell on the painful and depressing conditions as you might expect but, seems to exude a strong, matter-of-fact leadership style which most likely gave his men strength in the face of such disastrous and dangerous conditions. Contrast his account of the ENDURANCE voyage with that of the AURORA which was originally planned to be the expedition's supply ship and you clearly see what I am talking about. The painful, weakened conditions of the AURORA men is agonizing to read...frostbite, scruvy, depression, fatigue, hunger, thirst, and the loss of 3 of their comrades. This is not implying that Shackleton never mentions the poor shape of his conditions or of his crew; it just seems that he doesn't dwell upon it however worried he may have been. Yet, we sense his concern for the failing health of some of his men and we share his pride when they are in fact rescued from Elephant Island and he watches them eat "proper" food for the first time in a very long time. In fact, one can hardly review this book without letting Shackleton, in his own words, describe the joy that found when they encountered when his small party found the whaling village at Stromness Bay, "We had pierced the veneer of outside things. We had "suffered, starved, and triumphed, groveled down yet grapsed at glory, grown bigger in the bigness of the whole."...We had reached the naked soul of men." This is truly one of the greatest adventure stories ever written.

Send to Friend

   

Send to friend

Your name: *
Your e-mail: *
Recipient's email: *

Send to friend
 

  Your cart
  Sending Gifts

Features and Help

Bestsellers



Users Browsing - 69 unregistered customer(s)
Copyright © 2004-2010 GeoClicks - Unit 715, Tower B, Southmark, 11 Yip Hing Street, Wong Chuk Hang, Hong Kong