The South Pole; an account of the Norwegian Antarctic expedition in the "Fram,"…

(31 User reviews)   9734
By Betty Young Posted on Dec 25, 2025
In Category - Tech Balance
Amundsen, Roald, 1872-1928 Amundsen, Roald, 1872-1928
English
Ever wondered what it was really like to be the first person to stand at the bottom of the world? Forget the Hollywood version—this is the real deal, straight from the man who did it. Roald Amundsen’s account of his 1911 race to the South Pole isn't just about frostbite and sled dogs (though there's plenty of that). It’s a masterclass in quiet, meticulous planning, where the biggest enemy isn't the -40°F cold, but the clock itself. The tension isn't in dramatic showdowns; it's in the daily grind against a frozen continent, wondering if a rival team is just over the horizon. This is the original, unfiltered story of obsession and survival.
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After 1520 there is a gap in the history, which begins again in 1585. The Chancellor of that time was Queen Elizabeth’s favourite, the Earl of Leicester, who in the first issue of the new Press is celebrated as its founder. Convocation in 1584 had appointed a committee _De Libris imprimendis_, and in 1586 the University lent £100 to an Oxford bookseller, Joseph Barnes, to carry on a press. In the next year an ordinance of the Star Chamber allowed one press at Oxford, and one apprentice in addition to the master printer. Barnes managed the Press until 1617, and printed many books now prized by collectors, among them the first book printed at Oxford in Greek (the Chrysostom of 1586), the first book with Hebrew type (1596), Richard de Bury’s _Philobiblon_, and Captain John Smith’s _Map of Virginia_. FOUR FOUNDERS OF THE OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS [Illustration: Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester] [Illustration: Archbishop Laud] [Illustration: Dr. John Fell] [Illustration: Edward Hyde, Earl of Clarendon] [Illustration: THE INTERIOR OF THE OLD CONGREGATION HOUSE The first printing-house owned by the University; used for storing Oriental type and printing-furniture, 1652.] [Illustration: Upper part of the first page of the Oxford (now London) Gazette, 1665. The oldest newspaper still existing in England] The first notable promoter of the Oxford Press was Archbishop Laud, whose statutes contemplate the appointment of an _Architypographus_, and who secured for the University in 1632 Letters Patent authorizing three printers (each with two presses and two apprentices), and in 1636 a Royal Charter entitling the University to print ‘all manner of books’. The privilege of printing the Bible was not exercised at this date; but in 1636 Almanacks were produced, and this seems to have alarmed the Stationers’ Company, who then enjoyed a virtual monopoly of Bibles, Grammars, and Almanacks; for we find that in 1637 the University surrendered the privilege to the Stationers for an annual payment of £200, twice the amount of Joseph Barnes’s working capital. The most famous books belonging to what may be called the Laudian period were five editions of Burton’s _Anatomy of Melancholy_ and one of Bacon’s _Advancement of Learning_ in English. [Illustration: OXFORD UNIVERSITY ARMS Some ancient examples used by the Oxford University Press] [Illustration] [Illustration: From _The History of Lapland_ by John Shefferus, 1674, the first anthropological book published by the Press] The work of the Press during the Civil War is of interest to historians and bibliographers on account of the great number of Royalist Pamphlets and Proclamations issued while the Court of Charles I was at Oxford; a number swollen in appearance by those printed in London with counterfeit Oxford imprints. But this period is not important in the history of the Learned Press; and after 1649 it suffered a partial eclipse which did not pass until the Restoration. [Illustration: From W. Maundrell’s _Journey from Aleppo to Jerusalem_, Oxford, 1703, engraved by M. Burghers] The history of the Press in the latter part of the seventeenth century will always be connected with the name of the second of its great patrons, Dr. John Fell, Dean of Christ Church and Bishop of Oxford. Fell made the great collection of type-punches and matrices from which the beautiful types known by his name are still cast at Oxford; he promoted the setting up of a paper mill at Wolvercote, where Oxford paper is still made; he conducted the long, and ultimately successful, struggle with the Stationers and the King’s Printers, from which the history of Oxford Bibles and Prayer Books begins (1675). In 1671 he and three others took over the management...

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This is the official record of one of history's greatest adventures, told by the man who led it. In 1910, Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen set out secretly, telling the world he was heading north. His real goal? To beat the British team, led by Robert Falcon Scott, to the South Pole. The book follows his crew as they sail the Fram into the ice, establish a base camp, and prepare for the brutal trek inland.

The Story

Amundsen lays out his journey step-by-step. We see his team battle blizzards, navigate uncharted glaciers, and rely on their expert use of skis and dog sleds. The heart of the story is the final push: a small group leaves their main camp for the last, desperate sprint to the Pole. The writing is surprisingly straightforward—Amundsen is a man of action, not flowery prose. The drama comes from the stark facts: the temperatures, the distances, the constant calculations of food and fuel. When they finally plant their flag, the victory feels earned, not celebrated.

Why You Should Read It

What struck me most was Amundsen's focus. This isn't a tale of reckless bravery; it's about preparation. He studied Inuit methods, planned every supply depot to the ounce, and chose his team for skill, not fame. Reading his calm, detailed explanations of how to survive in Antarctica makes his success feel inevitable. You get a real sense of the man: fiercely competitive, brilliantly organized, and refreshingly humble about the natural forces he battled.

Final Verdict

Perfect for anyone who loves true adventure stories, but is tired of the exaggeration. If you enjoy seeing how a complex problem is solved through careful thinking and sheer grit, you'll be glued to this. It's also a fascinating companion read to the tragic story of Scott's expedition. More than a history lesson, it's the blueprint for how to achieve an "impossible" goal.



📢 Public Domain Notice

This book is widely considered to be in the public domain. It is available for public use and education.

Lucas Smith
5 months ago

Based on the summary, I decided to read it and the depth of research presented here is truly commendable. Worth every second.

Brian Brown
1 year ago

Very helpful, thanks.

Carol Williams
1 year ago

This book was worth my time since the content flows smoothly from one chapter to the next. Absolutely essential reading.

Steven Johnson
8 months ago

Not bad at all.

Mary King
4 weeks ago

Fast paced, good book.

5
5 out of 5 (31 User reviews )

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