Wind, Fire, and Ice: The Perils of a Coast Guard Icebreaker in Antarctica

Author:   Robert M. Bunes
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
ISBN:  

9781493060344


Pages:   296
Publication Date:   01 October 2021
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Our Price $66.99 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Wind, Fire, and Ice: The Perils of a Coast Guard Icebreaker in Antarctica


Add your own review!

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Robert M. Bunes
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
Imprint:   The Lyons Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.90cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 24.00cm
Weight:   0.621kg
ISBN:  

9781493060344


ISBN 10:   1493060341
Pages:   296
Publication Date:   01 October 2021
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Fresh out of his internship and hoping to see the world, Dr. Robert Bunes, signs up for a seven-month cruise on a Coast Guard icebreaker. What follows is a harrowing tale of paralyzing Antarctic ice sheets, a life-threatening shipboard fire, and a collision with an iceberg. Pamela Nagami MD, author of The Woman with the Worm in her Head and Bitten A tour of duty on an icebreaker bound for Antarctica, after stopping at a number of exotic ports, sounds like an easy travel adventure to the young doctor, Bob Bunes. He reports for duty with a paisley surfboard, a set of skis, and high hopes, only to find a ship with no medical supplies and inadequate equipment, eventually headed for the Weddell Sea, and what Sir Earnest Shackleton called the worst part of the worst ocean on earth. The weight of having ultimate medical responsibility for a 200-man crew in the most remote part of the world hits the doctor like a tsunami wave. Nothing in his training prepares him for a host of medical emergencies he later faces, like preforming surgery on a violently tossing ship or resuscitating a sailor in the middle of a massive shipboard fire. A collision with an immovable ice mountain tears a gash in the side of the ship and makes the vessel all the more vulnerable when it is later confronted with hurricane-force winds that flatten the vessel or wind-driven ice that imprisons the ship and threatens to crush it. The ship-captain's obsession with retrieving a set of oceanographic buoys and his last-ditch efforts at becoming an admiral leads to perilous lapses in his judgement. As the danger mounts, the doctor and the captain move ever closer to open conflict over the welfare of the crew. This riveting true-life tale of crisis and adventure grips the reader from the first page to the last. The extreme conditions of the Antarctic are vividly drawn, as is the fragility and tenacity of human life in the face of unimaginably stark circumstances. A must-read! ---Ellen Keigh, author of Streets of Silver Dr. Robert Bunes has written a fascinating account of his adventures as the physician assigned to a Coast Guard icebreaker, USCGC GLACIER, on an operation in the Wedell Sea. This is the same Sea in which Sir Ernest Shackleton came to an unhappy end, losing his ENDURANCE . The title refers to storms, a fire, and the possibility of achieving the same end as ENDURANCE. But it is also a story of differences of personalities, differences of attitudes, and differences of approach to life post Viet Nam. The book is of particular interest to me because I have also commanded in Antarctica, know and have sailed with one of the main personalities, have worked for another, and have encountered many of the same problems faced by GLACIER and her doughty crew. My approach to leadership problems and operational problems was different than the Good Doctor encountered. Not necessarily better, just different. And I have never had to deal personally with a fire at sea. But I have drilled and trained all of my crews for this, as did the command in GLACIER. I recommend this book to all who have sailed in the deep ice, who have encountered differences with their Captain in particular, and who have solved leadership and operational problems. And that is just about all of us! Captain Joe-Joseph H. Wubbold III CAPT USCG (Ret)


A brilliant slice of Polar history. Written by Dr Robert Bunes, the ships doctor on board of the icebreaker Glacier in the early 70s, he takes the reader on a journey into the icy waters of Antarctica. There his ship, 'the largest, toughest and most powerful icebreaker in the free world, is besieged in the ice pack of the Weddell sea. Ironically this modern wonder of power is stuck exactly in the same location where Shacklton's Endurance was crushed. Bunes does a fine job documenting the past history of ships that entered Antarctic's ice pack and what happen in these socially isolated conditions where leadership is stretched to its very limits and often snaps. --Will Steger, world famous Polar explorer A tour of duty on an icebreaker bound for Antarctica, after stopping at a number of exotic ports, sounds like an easy travel adventure to the young doctor, Bob Bunes. He reports for duty with a paisley surfboard, a set of skis, and high hopes, only to find a ship with no medical supplies and inadequate equipment, eventually headed for the Weddell Sea, and what Sir Earnest Shackleton called the worst part of the worst ocean on earth. The weight of having ultimate medical responsibility for a 200-man crew in the most remote part of the world hits the doctor like a tsunami wave. Nothing in his training prepares him for a host of medical emergencies he later faces, like preforming surgery on a violently tossing ship or resuscitating a sailor in the middle of a massive shipboard fire. A collision with an immovable ice mountain tears a gash in the side of the ship and makes the vessel all the more vulnerable when it is later confronted with hurricane-force winds that flatten the vessel or wind-driven ice that imprisons the ship and threatens to crush it. The ship-captain's obsession with retrieving a set of oceanographic buoys and his last-ditch efforts at becoming an admiral leads to perilous lapses in his judgement. As the danger mounts, the doctor and the captain move ever closer to open conflict over the welfare of the crew. This riveting true-life tale of crisis and adventure grips the reader from the first page to the last. The extreme conditions of the Antarctic are vividly drawn, as is the fragility and tenacity of human life in the face of unimaginably stark circumstances. A must-read! ---Ellen Keigh, author of Streets of Silver Fresh out of his internship and hoping to see the world, Dr. Robert Bunes, signs up for a seven-month cruise on a Coast Guard icebreaker. What follows is a harrowing tale of paralyzing Antarctic ice sheets, a life-threatening shipboard fire, and a collision with an iceberg. Pamela Nagami MD, author of The Woman with the Worm in her Head and Bitten Dr. Robert Bunes has written a fascinating account of his adventures as the physician assigned to a Coast Guard icebreaker, USCGC GLACIER, on an operation in the Wedell Sea. This is the same Sea in which Sir Ernest Shackleton came to an unhappy end, losing his ENDURANCE . The title refers to storms, a fire, and the possibility of achieving the same end as ENDURANCE. But it is also a story of differences of personalities, differences of attitudes, and differences of approach to life post Viet Nam. The book is of particular interest to me because I have also commanded in Antarctica, know and have sailed with one of the main personalities, have worked for another, and have encountered many of the same problems faced by GLACIER and her doughty crew. My approach to leadership problems and operational problems was different than the Good Doctor encountered. Not necessarily better, just different. And I have never had to deal personally with a fire at sea. But I have drilled and trained all of my crews for this, as did the command in GLACIER. I recommend this book to all who have sailed in the deep ice, who have encountered differences with their Captain in particular, and who have solved leadership and operational problems. And that is just about all of us! Captain Joe-Joseph H. Wubbold III CAPT USCG (Ret)


The author's remembrance is brimming with insights as well as captivating photographs... full of riveting details. -- Kirkus Reviews A brilliant slice of Polar history. Written by Dr Robert Bunes, the ships doctor on board of the icebreaker Glacier in the early 70s, he takes the reader on a journey into the icy waters of Antarctica. There his ship, 'the largest, toughest and most powerful icebreaker in the free world, is besieged in the ice pack of the Weddell sea. Ironically this modern wonder of power is stuck exactly in the same location where Shacklton's Endurance was crushed. Bunes does a fine job documenting the past history of ships that entered Antarctic's ice pack and what happen in these socially isolated conditions where leadership is stretched to its very limits and often snaps. --Will Steger, world famous Polar explorer A tour of duty on an icebreaker bound for Antarctica, after stopping at a number of exotic ports, sounds like an easy travel adventure to the young doctor, Bob Bunes. He reports for duty with a paisley surfboard, a set of skis, and high hopes, only to find a ship with no medical supplies and inadequate equipment, eventually headed for the Weddell Sea, and what Sir Earnest Shackleton called the worst part of the worst ocean on earth. The weight of having ultimate medical responsibility for a 200-man crew in the most remote part of the world hits the doctor like a tsunami wave. Nothing in his training prepares him for a host of medical emergencies he later faces, like preforming surgery on a violently tossing ship or resuscitating a sailor in the middle of a massive shipboard fire. A collision with an immovable ice mountain tears a gash in the side of the ship and makes the vessel all the more vulnerable when it is later confronted with hurricane-force winds that flatten the vessel or wind-driven ice that imprisons the ship and threatens to crush it. The ship-captain's obsession with retrieving a set of oceanographic buoys and his last-ditch efforts at becoming an admiral leads to perilous lapses in his judgement. As the danger mounts, the doctor and the captain move ever closer to open conflict over the welfare of the crew. This riveting true-life tale of crisis and adventure grips the reader from the first page to the last. The extreme conditions of the Antarctic are vividly drawn, as is the fragility and tenacity of human life in the face of unimaginably stark circumstances. A must-read! ---Ellen Keigh, author of Streets of Silver Fresh out of his internship and hoping to see the world, Dr. Robert Bunes, signs up for a seven-month cruise on a Coast Guard icebreaker. What follows is a harrowing tale of paralyzing Antarctic ice sheets, a life-threatening shipboard fire, and a collision with an iceberg. Pamela Nagami MD, author of The Woman with the Worm in her Head and Bitten Dr. Robert Bunes has written a fascinating account of his adventures as the physician assigned to a Coast Guard icebreaker, USCGC GLACIER, on an operation in the Wedell Sea. This is the same Sea in which Sir Ernest Shackleton came to an unhappy end, losing his ENDURANCE . The title refers to storms, a fire, and the possibility of achieving the same end as ENDURANCE. But it is also a story of differences of personalities, differences of attitudes, and differences of approach to life post Viet Nam. The book is of particular interest to me because I have also commanded in Antarctica, know and have sailed with one of the main personalities, have worked for another, and have encountered many of the same problems faced by GLACIER and her doughty crew. My approach to leadership problems and operational problems was different than the Good Doctor encountered. Not necessarily better, just different. And I have never had to deal personally with a fire at sea. But I have drilled and trained all of my crews for this, as did the command in GLACIER. I recommend this book to all who have sailed in the deep ice, who have encountered differences with their Captain in particular, and who have solved leadership and operational problems. And that is just about all of us! Captain Joe-Joseph H. Wubbold III CAPT USCG (Ret)


Author Information

Robert Bunes started his career as a General Practioner in medicine, but spent most of his career as a Legal Psychiatrist specializing in civil litigation cases. He lives in Malibu, California

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

MRG2025CC

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List