From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. This photo- and fact-filled book, in which nearly every page is a generously illustrated double gatefold, lands on the table with an undeniable thud and details 58 expeditions from the past 150 years-from Robert Peary and Matthew Henson's trek to the North Pole in 1909 to Edmund Hillary's 1953 climb up Everest (called by Tibetans "the mother goddess of the world") to Neil Armstrong's "one small step" onto the moon in 1969. De Porti, a writer and editor for Charta and art director of Alumina, chose these stories for their "cultural and scientific significance" and combines often-unseen images (readers will find reproductions of pages from travel journals, maps and sketches among the hundreds of archival photos) with explorer biographies and travel narratives. De Porti recounts failed as well as successful expeditions, and it's the former that resonate most, notably the doomed adventure of Robert Falcon Scott, who, after reaching the South Pole, discovered Roald Amundsen had planted the Norwegian flag there barely a month prior. Scott died on the return journey. Though some explorers' intentions were more noble than others (expanding colonial interests played no small role in many expeditions), the creative way these journeys are presented will impress armchair adventurers.
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From Booklist
*Starred Review* De Porti points out in a preface that when Yuri Gagarin orbited the earth in
Vostok I in just over 90 minutes in 1961, he was able to travel the same distance as the HMS
Challenger in its three-and-a-half-year voyage around the world, which began in 1872. From the middle of the nineteenth century, as the author indicates, there are historical documents, accounts, and reports of expeditions, and photographs, and many of them are extraordinarily evocative images, despite their having been taken with primitive equipment. The story of exploration is a story told in pictures, and this book contains hundreds of rare archival photos, both color and black and white, spread over vertical and horizontal gatefolds. The 53 stories here, De Porti writes, have been selected for their historical and scientific importance and also for their "sheer fascination." Some voyages are well known--those of Charles Lindbergh, Roald Amundsen, Robert Stott, Thor Heyerdahl, and Neil Armstrong. Some explorers are little known--such as Katherine Routledge, who explored the mysterious stone statues and the ancient culture that had erected them on Easter Island; Maria Reiche, who for 40 years studied the ancient archaeological sites of South America; and Vittorio Sella, who photographed the highest peaks, towering cliffs, and glaciers in America, Asia, and Africa. Readers will be fascinated by these journeys.
George CohenCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved