Mawson in Antarctica: To the Ends of the Earth by Joanna Grocholwicz (Allen & Unwin) PB RRP $19.99 ISBN9781761180590
Reviewed by Dianne Bates
Author Grocholwicz is a polar
historian and author who has written at least three narrative non-fiction books
like this one that draw on diaries, letters, and expedition narratives from
archives and personal collections around the world. She is known for realistic
portrayals of historical figures and the interplay of personalities that lend
her work a grittiness and authenticity that is not often present in historical
writing for children and young adults.
This latest novel is about the
1911-14 Australasian Antarctic Expedition headed by 29-year-old Douglas Mawson.
At the beginning of the book is a list of the eighteen Australians he headed,
including people whose jobs were as various as surgeon, storekeeper, radio
operator, dog-handler, photographer, taxidermist, and more. Except for two men,
the rest were aged 30 years and younger.
Also, before the story begins,
there’s a black and white illustration of the members of the party at the main
base in Cape Denison, Antarctica, as well as a double page spread of maps
showing the journey from Tasmania to the main base in Commonwealth Bay, and the
route taken by the Far Eastern party.
This – in 1912 -- is Mawson’s
second trip to the southern, frozen continent, the first being Ernest
Shackleton’s Nimrod adventure. A university employee, he will lead his
own expedition to explore the unchartered section of the Antarctic directly
south of Australia. Mawson’s tale is legendary, an epic struggle between one
man’s self-belief, and the worst conditions the hostile polar environment can
throw at him. His journey represents not only a feat of physical endurance but
also a triumph of the human spirit’s ability to conjure hope when luck has all
but run out.
The epilogue begins with the
words: ‘Mawson returned. Ninnis and Mertz dad. Return immediately and pick up
all hands.’ The main thrust of the book of course is the men’s adventure and
achievements. This book, well-written and totally engrossing, and ought to be
enjoyed – as did I -- by history buffs aged from 13+ years.
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