Death on the Barrens: A True Story of Courage and Tragedy in the Canadian Arctic

Author:   George James Grinnell ,  Roderick MacIver ,  George Luste
Publisher:   North Atlantic Books,U.S.
ISBN:  

9781556438820


Pages:   296
Publication Date:   20 April 2010
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

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Death on the Barrens: A True Story of Courage and Tragedy in the Canadian Arctic


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Overview

Set in the remote arctic region of Northern Canada, this book takes readers on a harrowing canoe voyage that results in tragedy, redemption, and, ultimately, transformation. George Grinnell was one of six young men who set off on the 1955 expedition led by experienced wilderness canoeist Art Moffatt. Poorly planned and executed, the journey seemed doomed from the start. Ignoring the approaching winter, the men became entranced with the peace and beauty of the arctic in autumn. As winter closed in, they suddenly faced numbing cold and dwindling food. When the crew is swept over a waterfall, Moffatt is killed and most of the gear and emergency food supplies destroyed. Confronting freezing conditions and near starvation, the remaining crew struggled to make it back to civilization. For Grinnell, the three-month expedition was both a rite of passage and a spiritual odyssey. In the Barrens, he lost his sense of identity and what he had been conditioned to think about society and himself. Forever changed by the experience, he unsparingly describes how the expedition influenced his adult life and what powerful insights he was able to glean from this life-altering experience.

Full Product Details

Author:   George James Grinnell ,  Roderick MacIver ,  George Luste
Publisher:   North Atlantic Books,U.S.
Imprint:   North Atlantic Books,U.S.
Dimensions:   Width: 15.30cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.80cm
Weight:   0.363kg
ISBN:  

9781556438820


ISBN 10:   1556438826
Pages:   296
Publication Date:   20 April 2010
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Judges, such as this reviewer, are often asked to evaluate the veracity and credibility of distant accounts of misadventure culminating in a death. No one who reads this story should entertain any doubt as to the scrupulous accuracy of this narrative, which chronicles the author's 1955 journey through the Canadian arctic with four friends. Bad planning left them without food or adequate warmth as winter closed in, and the group leader eventually died of hypothermia. Although the account reminds one of Farley Mowat's adventure novel, Lost in the Barrens, not to mention James A. Michener's Journey: A Novel, the detailed descriptions of the sensations endured by the writer, the haunting and evocative images he sets forth with poetic grace and erudite references, and the harrowing emotional roller-coaster he experienced in 1955--and every year since--leaves no doubt as to the fidelity of this first-person story of exploration, adventure and tragedy. VERDICT Superbly illustrated, this work represents the best that human kind and nature have to offer: courage, beauty and the challenge to survive. Recommended for all readers of true adventure or memoir. --Library Journal starred review, Gilles Renaud, Ontario Court of Justice Death on the Barrens is a must read for anyone who has seriously considered entering absolute wilderness, and for those who already know a step off the grid into a place like the Barrens can have a profound impact that reverberates through the rest of one's days. --Cary J. Griffith, author of Lost in the Wild: Danger and Survival in the North Woods .. . [The] three-month canoe trip across the uninhabited Canadian Barrens takes George Grinnell to the lip of the abyss that separates sanity from insanity and life from death. And it is his firsthand exploration of this uncertain edge that provides the profound insights that makes this a most powerful and unique narrative. --George Luste, from the Introduction A finely wrought distillation of half of a century spent looking for an explanation where none perhaps exists. Death on the Barrens tells of many deaths in an austere and unforgiving land of imponderable majesty where sentience extends far beyond human kind. --Farley Mowat, legendary author of People of the Deer and Never Cry Wolf A nice combination of struggling against nature and self-realization, this short book was enjoyable and thought-provoking. --The Philbrick-James Forum George James Grinnell brings tragedy of Into the Wild and the philosophy of the poets to his non-fiction account of a three-month pleasure trip by canoe and portage across the Canadian Barrens in 1955... Death on the Barrens meditates on beauty, loneliness, and the meaning of life while roaring down the rapids or battling the black flies or trying to outwait a blizzard without freezing to death in a ripped tent. It is a clear statement of our need for belief in something more than ourselves. --Read, Write, Laugh, Rewrite with Eileen Granfors This was an excellent memoir. For the outdoor and nature types I recommend [Death on the Barrens] highly. George, referring to himself as Jim in the book, tells us a heart wrenching and harrowing journey of six men through the Barrens... Not only is the adventurous side of the story told, but the spiritual experience of being out in the wilderness is explained. This was an intense read. --The Cajun Book Lady In these pages, you will learn how time and a doomed escapade into the Barrens can change a man...how marvelous and wonderful nature can be and how it can also be your worst enemy... The author's descriptions and recollections help to bring this powerful novel to life... [Death on the Barrens is] a very powerful and intelligently written memoir about the 1955 canoeing expedition which took the life of one man and changed the souls of the others. --BookPleasures.com Despite all of the obstacles in the book, the absolute honesty of the author shines through providing a tiny little ray of hope in his bleak world... Death on the Barrens is beautifully written...this book will keep you interested until the very end. --The Book Buff Grinnell's account affects the reader on several levels. He details the practical side of the trip...the physical exertion of canoeing and portaging; the exhilaration of shooting rapids; the camaraderie of the men; the psychological signs of suspicion, paranoia, and even questions of sanity...there's also a spiritual element... Grinnell quotes literature, poetry, scripture, Zen koans and Indian legend. The writing is very nice, and at times even lyrical. --The Record-Courier While the canoeists' trip could be critiqued--inadequate food, too many days spent relaxing during good traveling weather--Grinnell does not place blame. Instead, he remembers how their leader took them 'to a place of peace' and 'a time when my fears had been elevated through beauty into awe, when my vanity had been transformed by awe into love, and when love had bathed my soul in the waters of eternal peace.' For that he experienced starvation, frostbite, and near-drowning... Yet though Grinnell admits to being lost in despair at times, this is a book of recovery and acceptance. --Southern Rockies Nature Blog [Grinnell] tells this story with amazing poise, instantly drawing the reader in. One can almost feel the mist of the river and the bumping of the rapids, and later the cold and hunger. There is a lot of emotion caught within these pages. Add the stunning watercolors that help to break up the book and you have a true gem. --Reading for Sanity [In the Canadian Barrens, George James Grinnell] revels in the pristine vistas devoid of man while vacillating between fear of dying and awe. Eventually he feels himself disappearing into the landscape, just another caribou in the food chain. Death on the Barrens is a fascinating glimpse at the actions of six men when they have nothing left to confront but themselves. --Sheri, Village Books I am crazy about survivalist books; Into the Wild (this book completely changed the course of my life), Into Thin Air, Alive, etc... Death on the Barrens is just as captivating a read. Six men plan to traverse the Canadian arctic on canoes and seem to become spellbound with the beauty and lulled into relaxing in the wilderness rather than hurrying to beat the oncoming winter. --Jennifer Salita, Midwestern Days


Judges, such as this reviewer, are often asked to evaluate the veracity and credibility of distant accounts of misadventure culminating in a death. No one who reads this story should entertain any doubt as to the scrupulous accuracy of this narrative, which chronicles the author's 1955 journey through the Canadian arctic with four friends. Bad planning left them without food or adequate warmth as winter closed in, and the group leader eventually died of hypothermia. Although the account reminds one of Farley Mowat's adventure novel, Lost in the Barrens, not to mention James A. Michener's Journey: A Novel, the detailed descriptions of the sensations endured by the writer, the haunting and evocative images he sets forth with poetic grace and erudite references, and the harrowing emotional roller-coaster he experienced in 1955--and every year since--leaves no doubt as to the fidelity of this first-person story of exploration, adventure and tragedy. VERDICT Superbly illustrated, this work represents the best that human kind and nature have to offer: courage, beauty and the challenge to survive. Recommended for all readers of true adventure or memoir. --Library Journal starred review, Gilles Renaud, Ontario Court of Justice Death on the Barrens is a must read for anyone who has seriously considered entering absolute wilderness, and for those who already know a step off the grid into a place like the Barrens can have a profound impact that reverberates through the rest of one's days. --Cary J. Griffith, author of Lost in the Wild: Danger and Survival in the North Woods ... [The] three-month canoe trip across the uninhabited Canadian Barrens takes George Grinnell to the lip of the abyss that separates sanity from insanity and life from death. And it is his firsthand exploration of this uncertain edge that provides the profound insights that makes this a most powerful and unique narrative. --George Luste, from the Introduction A finely wrought distillation of half of a century spent looking for an explanation where none perhaps exists. Death on the Barrens tells of many deaths in an austere and unforgiving land of imponderable majesty where sentience extends far beyond human kind. --Farley Mowat, legendary author of People of the Deer and Never Cry Wolf A nice combination of struggling against nature and self-realization, this short book was enjoyable and thought-provoking. --The Philbrick-James Forum George James Grinnell brings tragedy of Into the Wild and the philosophy of the poets to his non-fiction account of a three-month pleasure trip by canoe and portage across the Canadian Barrens in 1955... Death on the Barrens meditates on beauty, loneliness, and the meaning of life while roaring down the rapids or battling the black flies or trying to outwait a blizzard without freezing to death in a ripped tent. It is a clear statement of our need for belief in something more than ourselves. --Read, Write, Laugh, Rewrite with Eileen Granfors This was an excellent memoir. For the outdoor and nature types I recommend [Death on the Barrens] highly. George, referring to himself as Jim in the book, tells us a heart wrenching and harrowing journey of six men through the Barrens... Not only is the adventurous side of the story told, but the spiritual experience of being out in the wilderness is explained. This was an intense read. --The Cajun Book Lady In these pages, you will learn how time and a doomed escapade into the Barrens can change a man...how marvelous and wonderful nature can be and how it can also be your worst enemy... The author's descriptions and recollections help to bring this powerful novel to life... [Death on the Barrens is] a very powerful and intelligently written memoir about the 1955 canoeing expedition which took the life of one man and changed the souls of the others. --BookPleasures.com Despite all of the obstacles in the book, the absolute honesty of the author shines through providing a tiny little ray of hope in his bleak world... Death on the Barrens is beautifully written...this book will keep you interested until the very end. --The Book Buff Grinnell's account affects the reader on several levels. He details the practical side of the trip...the physical exertion of canoeing and portaging; the exhilaration of shooting rapids; the camaraderie of the men; the psychological signs of suspicion, paranoia, and even questions of sanity...there's also a spiritual element... Grinnell quotes literature, poetry, scripture, Zen koans and Indian legend. The writing is very nice, and at times even lyrical. --The Record-Courier While the canoeists' trip could be critiqued--inadequate food, too many days spent relaxing during good traveling weather--Grinnell does not place blame. Instead, he remembers how their leader took them 'to a place of peace' and 'a time when my fears had been elevated through beauty into awe, when my vanity had been transformed by awe into love, and when love had bathed my soul in the waters of eternal peace.' For that he experienced starvation, frostbite, and near-drowning... Yet though Grinnell admits to being lost in despair at times, this is a book of recovery and acceptance. --Southern Rockies Nature Blog [Grinnell] tells this story with amazing poise, instantly drawing the reader in. One can almost feel the mist of the river and the bumping of the rapids, and later the cold and hunger. There is a lot of emotion caught within these pages. Add the stunning watercolors that help to break up the book and you have a true gem. --Reading for Sanity [In the Canadian Barrens, George James Grinnell] revels in the pristine vistas devoid of man while vacillating between fear of dying and awe. Eventually he feels himself disappearing into the landscape, just another caribou in the food chain. Death on the Barrens is a fascinating glimpse at the actions of six men when they have nothing left to confront but themselves. --Sheri, Village Books I am crazy about survivalist books; Into the Wild (this book completely changed the course of my life), Into Thin Air, Alive, etc... Death on the Barrens is just as captivating a read. Six men plan to traverse the Canadian arctic on canoes and seem to become spellbound with the beauty and lulled into relaxing in the wilderness rather than hurrying to beat the oncoming winter. --Jennifer Salita, Midwestern Days


Judges, such as this reviewer, are often asked to evaluate the veracity and credibility of distant accounts of misadventure culminating in a death. No one who reads this story should entertain any doubt as to the scrupulous accuracy of this narrative, which chronicles the author's 1955 journey through the Canadian arctic with four friends. Bad planning left them without food or adequate warmth as winter closed in, and the group leader eventually died of hypothermia. Although the account reminds one of Farley Mowat's adventure novel, Lost in the Barrens, not to mention James A. Michener's Journey: A Novel, the detailed descriptions of the sensations endured by the writer, the haunting and evocative images he sets forth with poetic grace and erudite references, and the harrowing emotional roller-coaster he experienced in 1955--and every year since--leaves no doubt as to the fidelity of this first-person story of exploration, adventure and tragedy. VERDICT Superbly illustrated, this work represents the best that human kind and nature have to offer: courage, beauty and the challenge to survive. Recommended for all readers of true adventure or memoir. -- Library Journal starred review, Gilles Renaud, Ontario Court of Justice Death on the Barrens is a must read for anyone who has seriously considered entering absolute wilderness, and for those who already know a step off the grid into a place like the Barrens can have a profound impact that reverberates through the rest of one's days. --Cary J. Griffith, author of Lost in the Wild: Danger and Survival in the North Woods .. . [The] three-month canoe trip across the uninhabited Canadian Barrens takes George Grinnell to the lip of the abyss that separates sanity from insanity and life from death. And it is his firsthand exploration of this uncertain edge that provides the profound insights that makes this a most powerful and unique narrative. --George Luste, from the Introduction


Author Information

Born into a prominent family, George Grinnell was raised in New York City. After being discharged from the United States Army in 1955, Grinnell attended Harvard University and then joined Art Moffatt and four others on a canoe expedition across the Barrens of Northern Canada. Upon his return, Grinnell received his Bachelor's degree from Columbia University, eventually obtaining a PhD in the history of science from the University of California, Berkeley. From 1967-1991 he taught the history of science and intellectual history at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada. Now retired, he lives in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, where he is writing a book and teaching meditation classes.

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