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AN EMPIRE OF ICE

SCOTT, SHACKLETON, AND THE HEROIC AGE OF ANTARCTIC SCIENCE

We are all familiar with Amundsen’s besting of Robert Falcon Scott in the race to the South Pole and then Scott’s recording of his dying days while hunkered down in a tent during a blizzard. But did you know that Scott’s expedition was carrying 35 pounds of fossils and rock samples that the team refused to abandon? John Nelson’s forceful voice emphasizes every word, managing to keep the listener engaged as Edward Larson views polar exploration through a lens of scientific purpose; expeditions employed scientists to expand knowledge (for the Empire!) in paleontology, geology, zoology, and magnetism. But Nelson is less successful with accents. He employs the same odd-sounding British accent for all the quotations to distinguish them from the narrative. Surely every explorer, scientist, and commentator didn’t sound the same.

Pub Date: Feb. 4, 2011

Duration: 10 hrs, 30 mins

Publisher: Tantor Media

Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

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    INTO THE ICE

    THE NORTHWEST PASSAGE, THE POLAR SUN, AND A 175-YEAR-OLD MYSTERY

    Narrator Mark Deakins provides appropriately measured enthusiasm for Mark Synnott's account of sailing his 47-foot boat, POLAR SUN, through the Northwest Passage. Synnott funds his plans by selling the idea of searching for nineteenth-century explorer Sir John Franklin's tomb to National Geographic, among others. The author alternates between his own nautical adventure and the Franklin story. Previously ignored Inuit oral history was critical in locating Franklin's two ships a few years ago, but now Synnott experiences disinterest or suspicion from current Inuit residents who question whether his search is as pointless as Franklin's expedition. When the action flags, Deakins maintains his energy to keep the listener involved, and he sounds distinctly careful in his pronunciations of the multiple Inuit names and places.

    Pub Date: April 15, 2025

    Duration: 12 hrs, 30 mins

    DD ISBN: 9798217019915

    Publisher: Penguin Audio

    Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

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      FOUR POINTS OF THE COMPASS

      THE UNEXPECTED HISTORY OF DIRECTION

      This brief but delightful and highly informed audiobook begins and ends with blue spheres. First, listeners learn that the blue marble that astronauts photographed from space actually had the South Pole on top until NASA flipped the image. It ends with the ever-present iPhone blue dot that locates Apple map users. Narrator Liam Garrigan has a natural storytelling style, and his British accent and professional delivery work well in this exploration of geographic direction. He narrates at a good pace and a sensible cadence that make this science-oriented text move almost too quickly. The central idea is how the cardinal directions gave life meaning throughout history but are now being displaced in the digital age, when the ideas of east against west and south versus north have geopolitical, rather than geographical, meanings.

      Pub Date: Nov. 12, 2024

      Duration: 5 hrs, 30 mins

      DD ISBN: 9781668132364

      Publisher: Simon & Schuster Audio

      Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026

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