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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Meredith HooperPublisher: Counterpoint Imprint: Counterpoint Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.567kg ISBN: 9781582437620ISBN 10: 1582437629 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 18 October 2011 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Stock Indefinitely Availability: In Print ![]() Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock. Table of ContentsReviewsPraise for The Longest Winter <br> A grand story of six brave men who literally and figuratively pulled together in their race for survival. -- Kirkus <br> Best book I ever read on Antarctica. --George Denton, author of The Fate of Greenland <br> This is Antarctic nonfiction at its best. A real page turner that I read in two sittings. Having spent a dozen austral summers on the Antarctic ice, I can tell the true McCoy description of Polar life and teamwork when I read it. This little known tale of Scott's early South Polar explorers gets into the realities of living and working in the isolated days a century ago before telecoms and e mail. While the well known dramas of the South Polar race are in movies and books, Meredith Hooper tells the almost unknown tale of these extraordinary men of Scott's team who didn't go to the Pole but explored and survived for over a year on a diet of only Weddell seal and penguin. Such a tale of extraordinary endurance. Hooper tells thist Praise for The Longest Winter <br> A grand story of six brave men who literally and figuratively pulled together in their race for survival. -- Kirkus <br> Best book I ever read on Antarctica. --George Denton, author of The Fate of Greenland <br> This is Antarctic nonfiction at its best. A real page turner that I read in two sittings. Having spent a dozen austral summers on the Antarctic ice, I can tell the true McCoy description of Polar life and teamwork when I read it. This little known tale of Scott's early South Polar explorers gets into the realities of living and working in the isolated days a century ago before telecoms and e mail. While the well known dramas of the South Polar race are in movies and books, Meredith Hooper tells the almost unknown tale of these extraordinary men of Scott's team who didn't go to the Pole but explored and survived for over a year on a diet of only Weddell seal and penguin. Such a tale of extraordinary endurance. Hooper tells thisy Praise for The Longest Winter <br> [A] gripping scientific adventure story [that] also includes fascinating details about glacial ecology. -- Publisher's Weekly (Starred Review) <br> A grand story of six brave men who literally and figuratively pulled together in their race for survival. -- Kirkus <br> Best book I ever read on Antarctica. --George Denton, author of The Fate of Greenland <br> This is Antarctic nonfiction at its best. A real page turner that I read in two sittings. Having spent a dozen austral summers on the Antarctic ice, I can tell the true McCoy description of Polar life and teamwork when I read it. This little known tale of Scott's early South Polar explorers gets into the realities of living and working in the isolated days a century ago before telecoms and e mail. While the well known dramas of the South Polar race are in movies and books, Meredith Hooper tells the almost unknown tale of these extraordinary men of Scott's team who didn't go tot Praise for The Longest Winter [A] gripping scientific adventure story [that] also includes fascinating details about glacial ecology. -Publisher's Weekly (Starred Review) A grand story of six brave men who literally and figuratively pulled together in their race for survival. -Kirkus Best book I ever read on Antarctica. -George Denton, author of The Fate of Greenland This is Antarctic nonfiction at its best. A real page turner that I read in two sittings. Having spent a dozen austral summers on the Antarctic ice, I can tell the true McCoy description of Polar life and teamwork when I read it. This little known tale of Scott's early South Polar explorers gets into the realities of living and working in the isolated days a century ago before telecoms and e mail. While the well known dramas of the South Polar race are in movies and books, Meredith Hooper tells the almost unknown tale of these extraordinary men of Scott's team who didn't go to the Pole but explored and survived for over a year on a diet of only Weddell seal and penguin. Such a tale of extraordinary endurance. Hooper tells this tale intelligently, enchantingly and perceptively, often in the explorer's own words, since she has spent years studying the men's diaries at SPRI. What's more, she has visited the isolated Ross Sea spots where they lived or sailed past. It doesn't get any better than reading this Antarctic tale to help one imagine what real exploration was like on this extraordinarily inhospitable continent. -Warren Zapol, author of Anesthesiology Author InformationMeredith Hooper received her post–graduate degree at Oxford. She is a writer, lecturer, and expert on Antarctica as well as the acclaimed author of numerous books, including The Ferocious Summer, which won the Nettie Palmer Award for Nonfiction. She has traveled and worked extensively in Antarctica and is the recipient of the Antarctica Service Medal. She lives in London. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |