Race To The Pole: 3 (Literary Non-Fiction)

Race To The Pole: 3 (Literary Non-Fiction)

by Meredith Hooper (Author)

Synopsis

Until the early years of the 20th century, the vast continent of Antarctica was barely discovered. All that changed, when Scott, Shackleton, and Amundsen set out to solve the last great unsolved geographical mystery and find the South Pole.

This book tells the amazing tale of their expeditions into the unknown. It is high adventure, dramatic and tense, with three contrasting characters - Scott, the traditional British hero, whose lack of preparation had tragic results; Shackleton (born in County Kildare) a more modern leader, refusing to sacrifice his men's lives to the cause; Amundsen, Norwegian and the true professional whose attention to detail saw him through. All the great themes are here - courage, hardship, agonising decisions, leadership, suffering and tragic death.



With stunning photographs taken during the expeditions.

$3.25

Save:$4.27 (57%)

Quantity

5 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 128
Publisher: Hodder Children's Books
Published: 14 Feb 2002

ISBN 10: 0340785055
ISBN 13: 9780340785058
Children’s book age: 9-11 Years

Media Reviews
Packs a huge amount of action into a very short retelling * Cork Evening Echo *
Well-written and well-researched ... a wonderfully gripping, inspirational story of personal bravery and sacrifice ... a wonderful book for anyone interested in the human spirit and its endeavours * School Librarian *
All the great themes are here -- courage, hardship, painful decisions, leadership, suffering and tragic death * The Newspaper (London) *
Well-written and well-researched... a wonderfully gripping, inspirational story of personal bravery and sacrifice... a wonderful book for anyone interested in the human spirit and its endeavours * The School Librarian *
'Fabulously readable account' * TES Primary *
Author Bio
Meredith Hooper was born in Australia, and studied Imperial and Naval history at Oxford. She has an international reputation as a writer of exceptional fiction and non fiction for children and adults, able to distil a wealth of research into fine, lucid prose. She is also visting Research Fellow of the Royal Institution Centre for the History of Science and Technology and a member of the Association of British Science Writers. She has travelled to Antarctica and written extensively about the continent, and was awarded the 2000 Antarctica Medal by the Royal Institution.