
Ice Ghosts
The Epic Hunt for the Lost Franklin Expedition
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Narrated by:
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Malcolm Hillgartner
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By:
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Paul Watson
Ice Ghosts weaves together the epic story of the Lost Franklin Expedition of 1845 - whose two ships and crew of 129 were lost to the Arctic ice - with the modern tale of the scientists, divers, and local Inuit behind the incredible discovery of the flagship's wreck in 2014.
Paul Watson, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who was on the icebreaker that led the discovery expedition, tells a fast-paced historical adventure story: Sir John Franklin and the crew of the HMS Erebus and Terror setting off in search of the fabled Northwest Passage, the hazards they encountered, the reasons they were forced to abandon ship hundreds of miles from the nearest outpost of Western civilization, and the decades of searching that turned up only rumors of cannibalism and a few scattered papers and bones - until a combination of faith in Inuit lore and the latest science yielded a discovery for the ages.
©2017 Paul Watson (P)2017 Blackstone Audio, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















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A fascinating and detailed account of the doomed Franklin Expedition
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Excellent account
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Excellent
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There’s a lot of minutia about the people involved with the search, so if you are looking for details, this is the book for you!
The author jumps around in time a lot, and that can be off putting. The book reads more like a very long and detailed encyclopedia article, so it can get boring at times.
This book doesn’t seem to have much about the lives of the other crew (maybe that’s not known) and doesn’t go much into speculation about the daily lives of people on the ship.
Still all in all a good read if you are interested in what is currently known/proven/documented about the HMS Terror and Erebus.
Interesting book, but not the best
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Decent
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one mistake
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Sadly, the author's keen eye for detail rapidly becomes tiresome. The long digression into the working conditions at the factory that made the expeditions tinned meat could have been skipped, and although the in depth description of Victorian era canning techniques may have been somewhat relevant, about that point I began to feel like the author was wasting my time. Then things go from bad to worse. When we get to the search for Franklin it becomes a confusing mish mash of who went where, and what cairn was built by whom, and where and when. I found myself needing a map to keep track of things; but to be fair, that sort of problem often comes with the audiobook format.
At this point though there is a long, long, long digression into the story of an Inuit who claimed that the Franklin Expedition survivors were massacred. The digression focuses far less on if the massacre actually happened (it didn't) than on the fact that the guy drank a lot and White people didn't want to believe him because they were racist, but some did, but others didn't because they were racist. We also go through Lady Franklin's fight with the Admiralty, which is deservedly a huge part of the story. Even so, by the time I got told that she switched from wearing mourning clothes to wearing green and other bright colors... well then I started skipping ahead.
When we get to modern day, this starts to sound like the papers I used to write in college, where I was trying to fit in everything I discovered while doing research, without regard to if it was remotely relevant or not, just to show that I had researched it. We are 'treated" to long digressions into why and how the Inuit practice female infanticide. This gem came after a long piece on the traditional Inuit way of life, which marked a return to the perpetual refrain of "The bad white people didn't listen to the Inuit because they were racist." (Yes, this is no doubt completely true; but we kind of caught on to that the first 79 times you told us.) Then we get a long and fairly pointless digression into "Eskimo Numbers", the exact size and cost of the prefabricated housing the Canadian Government provided for the Inuit in the 50s and 60s, and the story of how a (completely unrelated, as far as I could tell) anthropologist got some Inuit to sell him their amulet pouches in exchange for things like sewing needles. (Apparently this ranks up there with the Burning of the Library of Alexandria on the authors list of "Great Crimes Against Humanity".) There was a bit about an Inuit historian who thinks he was grabbed by an evil spirit as a child and almost dragged out of his family's igloo... or maybe it was a tent, the story varied. At this point we were so far from the stated subject of the book I felt like I needed binoculars to see it. In a desperate hope of actually getting back to the Franklin expedition... (you know... that thing I bought the book to learn about) I skipped ahead again, only to land in a long part that apparently dealt with the Canadian Government's attempts during the 50s and 60s to send Inuit kids to boarding school, ( a lot of them died, mostly from TB but some from suicide). Then I skipped some more to find out ALL about the file that the author got (digitally) about a Canadian expedition that was at least proposed in 1969... but to be honest I skipped the rest of that chapter after a discussion about how notes on the file had been made with a felt tipped pen. I finally gave up when discussion of underwater archaeology turned into a long digression about the childhood of Canada's first professional underwater archaeologist, who apparently grew up in Poland during WW2, and then was taken (by his brother in law) to live in the South of France, where he met some French navy divers.... and at that point I just gave up. Was this guy being paid by the word?
(Spoiler alert. Lead poisoning didn't kill the expedition members, and they were starving so badly that they engaged in cannibalism at the end. Both wrecks were found, and Parks Canada has some neat videos of them. At least some of the men made it to the North American mainland. Apparently the last survivors were Capt. Crozier and assistant surgeon Alexander MacDonald, who might have been seen in the Baker Lake area, 250 miles inland, but they never made it home.)
The only thing that made this book bearable for so long (and at over 12 hours it is a LONG book) was the top flight performance of Malcolm Hillgartner as narrator. Not only does he have a magnificent voice, he really knows his craft. His style kept me interested when the author was doing his level best to bore me to death. He is a first class narrator and I will look for other books that are narrated by him in the future.
This book would be great if it was 30% shorter.
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Like butter, spread over too much bread.
It's okay.
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long but thorough
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Wow!
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