L'expédition de la Jeannette au pôle Nord, racontée par tous les membres de…
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I picked up this book knowing nothing about the Jeannette expedition, and I was completely swept away. It's compiled from the journals and reports of the officers and crew, so you get the story from every angle—the captain's fraught decisions, the doctor's grim medical notes, the simple observations of the sailors. There's no single narrator, which makes it feel incredibly immediate and real.
The Story
The USS Jeannette, funded by a newspaper magnate and led by Captain George De Long, sets sail from San Francisco in 1879. Their goal is to reach the North Pole via the Bering Strait, fueled by a popular (and wildly incorrect) theory of an 'Open Polar Sea.' Instead, they find impenetrable pack ice. The ship gets locked in, drifts helplessly for nearly two years, and is eventually crushed. The crew escapes onto the ice, dragging their lifeboats and supplies across frozen, shifting terrain. What follows is an agonizing three-month trek towards Siberia, plagued by starvation, scurvy, and brutal cold. Not everyone makes it.
Why You Should Read It
This book hit me hard. It's less about heroism and more about the sheer, grinding will to live. You see the crew's discipline fray, their camaraderie tested by hunger and despair. The details are stark—what they ate (spoiler: it gets grim), how they tried to stay sane, the moments of shocking kindness and sudden loss. Reading their own words makes you feel the weight of each mile and the crushing silence of the Arctic. It's a powerful reminder of how small we are against the raw force of nature.
Final Verdict
Perfect for anyone who loves true survival stories like Endurance or Into Thin Air. It's for readers who don't need a neat, happy ending but want an unflinching look at a real adventure gone wrong. The multiple perspectives can feel fragmented at times, but that's also its strength—you're piecing the tragedy together just as they lived it. A haunting, unforgettable read.
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Mary Perez
4 months agoI wasn’t planning to read this, yet the content flows smoothly from one chapter to the next. I'm sending the link to all my friends.
Melissa Flores
4 months agoHaving explored similar works, the depth of research presented here is truly commendable. I appreciate the effort put into this.
Matthew Brown
5 days agoIt’s rare that I write reviews, but the clarity of the writing makes this accessible to a wide audience. Truly inspiring.
Karen Martin
3 months agoI found this while browsing online and the content strikes a great balance between detail and readability. An impressive piece of work.