Shackleton's Argonauts

Shackleton's Argonauts : A Saga of the Antarctic Ice-Pack
Author Frank Hurley
Country Australia
Language English
Genre Children's non-fiction
Publisher Angus and Robertson
Publication date
1948
Media type Print
Pages 140pp
Preceded by Pearls and Savages : Adventures in the Air, on Land and Sea - in New Guinea
Followed by The Diaries of Frank Hurley 1912-1941

Shackleton's Argonauts : A Saga of the Antarctic Ice-Pack (1948) is a children's information book by Australian photographer and explorer Frank Hurley. The book was also illustrated by Hurley, and won the Children's Book of the Year Award: Older Readers in 1948.[1]

Book summary

Frank Hurley was the official photographer attached to Ernest Shackleton's 1914 expedition to the Antarctic. Known as the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition, Shackleton's aim was to ship his party to the head of the Weddell Sea and then cross the continent to the Ross Sea with a small party by dog sledge. But things went wrong from the start when their ship, the Endurance, was caught and crushed in ice-packs. After months surviving on the ice, the expedition finally made it to Elephant Island. From there Shackleton undertook an open-boat journey to South Georgia to organise a rescue, which, after some months and several attempts, was finally successful.

Hurley was able to save some negatives from the expedition and used a number to illustrate the book.

Critical reception

Geoffrey Hutton in The Argus found the book a simple tale told well: "This is a plain tale told by a famous Australian explorer of the near-disaster which befell Shackleton's dauntless company when the Endurance was crushed by pack-ice in the Weddell Sea...Hurley travelled with Shackleton as official photographer, a role he had filled in Mawson's expedition of 1911-14, and his book is enriched by a magnificent pictorial record of the Antarctic, a series which largely, paid off the backers of the expedition. His name, and that of his famous leader, are a reminder that Australia has played an important role in the exploration of the continent from which our weather is largely dictated, and in which we lay claim to an area almost as large as Australia itself."[2]

See also

References

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