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The Tragic History of the Search for the Northwest Passage
Knopf
March 2010
On Sale: March 2, 2010
464 pages ISBN: 0307263924 EAN: 9780307263926 Hardcover
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Non-Fiction History
The enthralling and often harrowing history of the
adventurers who searched for the Northwest Passage, the holy
grail of nineteenth-century British exploration. After the triumphant end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815, the
British took it upon themselves to complete something they
had been trying to do since the sixteenth century: find the
fabled Northwest Passage, a shortcut to the Orient via a sea
route over northern Canada. For the next thirty-five years
the British Admiralty sent out expedition after expedition
to probe the ice-bound waters of the Canadian Arctic in
search of a route, and then, after 1845, to find Sir John
Franklin, the Royal Navy hero who led the last of these
Admiralty expeditions and vanished into the maze of
channels, sounds, and icy seas with two ships and 128
officers and men. In The Man Who Ate His Boots, Anthony Brandt tells the whole
story of the search for the Northwest Passage, from its
beginnings early in the age of exploration through its
development into a British national obsession to the final
sordid, terrible descent into scurvy, starvation, and
cannibalism. Sir John Franklin is the focus of the book but
it covers all the major expeditions and a number of
fascinating characters, including Franklin’s extraordinary
wife, Lady Jane, in vivid detail. The Man Who Ate His Boots
is a rich and engaging work of narrative history that
captures the glory and the folly of this ultimately tragic
enterprise.
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