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Dead Reckoning : great adventure writing from the golden age of exploration
by Helen Whybrow


  
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Book Description

If you’re interested in exploring the genre of armchair travel and adventure, Dead Reckoning: Great Adventure Writing from the Golden Age of Exploration, 1800 -1900, edited by Helen Whybrow, is the perfect place to begin. Whybrow has included excerpts from the writings of a diverse group of travelers, both the familiar (Meriwether Lewis, Charles Darwin, and Sven Hedin, among others) and the not so familiar (including Mrs. Alfred “Mary” Mummery, who climbed one of the most difficult mountains in the Alps with her husband in 1880, and Mary Kingsley, whose trip to West Africa in the 1890s included friendly encounters with cannibals, fighting off crocodiles, and summiting Mount Cameroon, where she left her calling card). Among other travelers whose tales we share are George Kennan (who nearly froze to death in Siberia), Mark Twain (in the American West); John Wesley Powell (on the Colorado River), Fridtjof Nansen (at the North Pole); Robert Louis Stevenson (journeying with a donkey in France); and Francis Parkman (on the Oregon Trail). There are thrills, chills, and excitement galore in these stirring accounts of men and women who roamed the world o’er.




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