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| Ordeal by Ice | 
| Author: Farley Mowat Publisher: McClelland & Stewart Ltd Category: Book
Buy Used: $5.92
Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 1420957
Format: Import Media: Paperback Pages: 510 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
ISBN: 0771066864 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780771066863 ASIN: 0771066864
Publication Date: 1989 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Standard used condition.
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| Customer Reviews:
First-rate history of the Arctic June 14, 2000 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
Farley Mowat first went to Arctic climes as a boy during the 1930s. After the war he returned to the North, and began a career as an author which has continued for half a century. At the same time, he developed a deep attachment to the Canadian wilderness which has led him on a long and extraordinary voyage of personal discovery. In the late fifties, after a decade of Arctic activity, Mowat conceived the idea of writing a history of the major explorations which had taken place there. His purpose was twofold: firstly, there was no other complete history available, although a great deal of excellent material lay hidden away in out-of-print books and the dusty corners of libraries. Secondly, he wanted to pay a tribute to the men who first went into those sometimes inhospitable lands and as he says, "...demonstrate the magnitude and grandeur of human endeavour in that hard environment." "Ordeal by Ice" is the first of the three books in the "Top of the World" series. It tells of a number of early expeditions to the frozen north, starting with Henry Hudson's early 17th century voyage, which ended in tragedy and mystery. Indeed, tragedy of the most appalling kind awaited many of those who attempted to make their way through the "Icie Seas," and it is the attempt to progress against the fantastic odds of the northern winter which makes the stories Mowat has collected so compelling. This is invigorating history, of a kind which Mowat has made his own (see also "Sea of Slaughter," "People of the Deer," "The Desperate People" etc.). Not only has he done us a great service by bringing it out of its mothballs, so to speak, but he has also created a vital and highly readable saga of northern exploration that can be read for its own sake.
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Wildlife, nature and the Environment
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