Nicholas Reardon is a Life Member of the OAEA who is "proprietor" of an online bookstore offering numerous books of interest to the Antarctic genre book enthusiast. Nicholas is located in the UK, however his book marketing and sales are world wide. The books are too numerous to list, however the titles and thumbnails can be viewed here:
https://nakedfonts.blogspot.com/2023/01/antarctic-booklist.html.
Book Review by Steve
Wroe
ex British Antarctic
Survey.
The Last Days of
Ernest Shackleton
Isbn 9781901037210
So much
has been written about the life and times of Earnest Shackleton that it comes
as a surprise when a new book is published that sheds new information about
him.
The Last
Days of Ernest Shackleton is such a book. The account, by George Ross, differs
from other books in a number of ways. Ross gives his narrative from the
perspective of someone who was working as a member of the crew on Shackleton’s
last trip to South Georgia.
Ross (The
narrator) joined the ship and worked as a ‘Donkeyman’ which entailed working in
the engine room of the ship (arguably the worst place to work). Prior to this,
Ross held a number of jobs including lumberjack. Ross’s narrative is written in
his own words which ensures a clear ‘easy’ style making the book a very
enjoyable read.
This book
is enhanced by the inclusion of anecdotes and the minutiae of detail which
could only come from someone who was there at the time, which makes this book
different from many others and brings this book alive. Shackleton’s earlier
life is also brought into focus and particularly his interest and enthusiasm
for the early Boy Scout Movement under Baden Powell. Shackleton recognised,
along with Baden Powell, the value of instilling the Scout Movement ethos in
youth and supported this early movement.
In fact,
such was Shackleton’s commitment to the principles of the Scout Movement that
he held a competition amongst 1700 Scouts for a chance to join Shackleton as
his cabin boy. This number was whittled down to two and eventually James Marr
from Aberdeen was to sail throughout the voyage.
This
story has an ironic twist as Marr later made several trips to the Antarctic as
a marine biologist and was later instrumental in setting up the British
Antarctic Survey. In support of the written narrative, the book contains a
wealth of supporting information. This takes the form of photographs, maps and
also hand drawn pictures and paintings, many of which were produced at the
time. What I found to be particularly poignant was the description of
Shackleton’s funeral and the level of detail with regards the information about
the pallbearers (all from the Shetland Islands). I also found the inclusion of
an interview with Shackleton of interest as are the text of speeches made in
commemoration of Shackleton.
Also in
the book is included a clipping from a newspaper of the time, describing how
Shackleton died in the arms of Ross. All of these pieces of information pull
together to make for a ‘package’ creating a fascinating human insight into a
great man. In summary, this book is a cornucopia of information of the kind
that brings to life the final days of who is probably the most enigmatic figure
of the ‘Heroic era’ of Polar exploration. Anybody with an interest in
Shackleton or polar exploration will find this book a fascinating read
Mr.
GEORGE HENRY ROSS, was with Shackleton on his 1921-22 expedition to the South
Pole. Mr. Ross was one of the last survivors of the ill-fated Shackleton
expedition. He was whaling in South Georgia when he joined the ship Quest as a
donkeyman.
He
was born in London and, at the start of an adventurous career, went to sea when
he was 14. In 1913 he went to the Shetlands, where two years later he married a
Shetland girl. Mr. Ross was one of the first men from the Shetlands to join up
at the outbreak of the first world war. He was in the battle of Jutland, and
was seriously injured while serving in the Royal Navy. Lumberjack: After that
war he went to South Georgia. Between the Shackleton expedition and the second
world war he worked as a lumberjack in Canada.
Then he
joined up again for service in the second war. Two of the ships in which he
served as a gunlayer were torpedoed. For a time during the war he was based in
Lowestoft. As well as whaling and lumberjacking, the other jobs Mr. Ross
tackled including helping in hospitals and fishing. He claimed that there was
not a country in the world he had not visited. He travelled round the world
eight times.
Mr. Ross
came to Yarmouth from the Shetlands after the last war with the Scottish
herring fleet. His wife, Mrs. Annie Ross, worked for more than 40 years as a
fisher girl. Mr. and Mrs. Ross went into the boarding-house business at
Yarmouth. They gave up their Albert Square boarding-house then moved to
Havelock Road. The only thing they insisted on taking with them was the name of
the house -- Shackleton House.
The Last Days of Ernest Shackleton:
A First Hand Account by George Ross
ISBN 9781901037210
The Last
Days of Ernest Shackleton, is a unique and fully illustrated account of
Shackleton's death and burial in South Georgia from the personal point of view
of a seaman on the Quest Expedition by the name of George Ross.
George
joined the Quest Expedition, at a place called Leith Harbour, in South Georgia,
with the position donkey-man (a person in charge of a ships engine room) and he
explains in detail the daily running of the ship after Shackleton's death as a
first hand account from a below decks crew members point of view.
Along
with George's first hand account the book covers both the funeral arrangements,
the Shetland Pallbearers, a short history of Shackleton's Scouts, and the
speeches at the unveiling of the Shacketon memorial.
This
along with photos, maps, paintings and drawings of the expedition, crew, ship,
Grytviken church, funeral and grave To finish off the book the book contains an
interview with the late Ernest Shackleton where he explains in his own words
how his life at sea started and how he would like to be remembered.
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