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Cold burial : a true story of endurance and disaster

Book  - 2002
971.92020922 Pow
1 copy / 0 on hold

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Location
Victoria Available
  • ISBN: 0312288549
  • Physical Description print
    xv, 264 pages, 1 unnumbered page : illustrations ; 22 cm
  • Edition 1st U.S. ed.
  • Publisher New York : St. Martin's Press, 2002.

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references (pages 263-265)
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 36.95

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Summary for ISBN Number 0312288549
Cold Burial : A True Story of Endurance and Disaster
Cold Burial : A True Story of Endurance and Disaster
by Powell-Williams, Clive
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Summary

Cold Burial : A True Story of Endurance and Disaster


For schoolboys in the 1920s, too young to have experienced first-hand the horrors of World War One, theirs was yet the age of adventure. Their imaginations fired by the exploits of Robert Scott, T. E. Lawrence, Ernest Shackleton, and George Mallory, and by the novels of John Buchan and Jack London, they dreamed of exploring and conquering new frontiers. Lawrence had retreated from public life, and Scott, Shackleton, and Mallory were by then all dead, but their heroic feats remained the measure of British manhood, the standard to be carried forward.In the Spring of 1926, Edgar Christian, a young man of eighteen fresh out of public school, joined his dashing cousin, the legendary (if somewhat self-styled) adventurer Jack Hornby, and a friend named Harold Adlard on an expedition into the Barren Lands of the Canadian Northwest Territories. The plan was to hunt caribou and trap for fur. For young Edgar, the Barrens expedition offered a chance to prove himself and to find his direction in life; for Hornby, a veteran of the Great War as wellprevious forays into the Northwest (he was known in some quarters as "Hornby of the North"), it represented his latest date with disaster. Together they would demonstrate that civilized men could survive, even thrive, in one of the world's most inhospitable regions. They were proved wrong.Based in large part upon a diary left behind by Edgar, discovered when his body and those of his companions were found two years after their deaths, Clive Powell-Williams' account of the expedition is a gripping narrative of innocence and experience, youthful idealism and unyielding nature. It matters little that we know in advance the tragic outcome, for in its unfolding Cold Burial recounts a tale of courage, folly, and ultimately redemptive love that will haunt readers long after they've read the last page.