you
are in the North
Pole Books Section. In
the Adventure/Historical Department. in
theYellowAirplane store.
Arctic Exploration Books
The North Pole is still a virtually
untouched place on this planet, this is a list of books about the North
Pole and Arctic Exploration.
Through the courage of the few men
who have been there we have these fantastic stories of courage and strength.
By looking at this North Pole books page, the north pole movie page
and the north pole exhibits from these links you will learn a tremendous
amount about the history of these daring expeditions. That's the
first step. After learning about the polar adventures you can have
a chance to actually go on one of the yearly arctic adventures with Global
Expedition Adventures. This is a company that has been taking people to both
the north pole and the south pole for many years.
One of the worlds latest explorers
is Curtis Lieber and is the expeditionary leader of the 2001 north pole
expedition. You can see North Pole Expedition Exhibits at the bottom of
this page.
0004851Bernt
Balchen: Polar Aviator Softbound Book
Glines. He set polar flight records, organized a series of daring
wartime air operations, and became a leader in Arctic aviation. But
despite these achievements, Balchen saw his public image and
military career undermined by the famous and influential Adm. Richard Byrd.
This is a full and compelling portrait of a pilot overshadowed in
his lifetime by Byrd but whose expertise and vision continue
to guide trans-Arctic aviation. 350 pgs., 50 photos, 6"x 9½", sfbd.
.....#0004851 1 0004851
00050990005099318 width=200>
0005099Flying
Upside Down Hardbound Book
True Tales of an Antarctic Pilot, Hinebaugh. As an LC-130 pilot with
the U.S. Navy, the author puts you in the seat next to him to experience
the adventure of flying over the coldest, driest, highest, windiest,
and most godforsaken place on earth - Antarctica. He conveys the thrill
of seeing the sites where such giants of Antarctic exploration as
Amundsen, Byrd, Scott, and Shackleton began their journeys. 328 pgs.,
6"x 9", hdbd.
.....#0005099 3 0005099
00060270006027303 width=200>
0006027Arctic
Bush Pilot Softbound Book
From Navy Combat to Flying Alaska's Northern Wilderness Anderson
& Rearden. Backed by Wien Airlines, former Navy combat pilot
"Andy" Anderson pioneered post-war bush service to Alaska's Koyukuk
River region, serving miners, Natives, sportsmen, geologists, adventurers,
and assorted bush rats. Besides passengers, he hauled everything needed
for bush life. Crammed with adventures and misadventures and generously
illustrated. 352 pgs., 50 B&W photos, 6"x 9", sfbd.
.....#0006027 1 0006027
00054370005437304 width=200>
0005437By
Airship to the North Pole Hardbound Book
P.J. Capelotti. The strangeness of these early airships and some
of the people promoting them, especially in the unforgiving world
of the Arctic, makes this book a "must" for anyone interested in
aviation history or in polar exploration. The author deftly combines archaeological
and historical sources in a fresh and convincing way to tell this little-known
story. 229 pgs., 6¼"x 9¼", hdbd.
The Diary and Notebook of Richard
E. Byrd. Byrd & Goerler, ed. First to fly over the North
Pole - or was he? Some have doubted that Byrd actually reached the
North Pole in his 1926 flight. This diary, unearthed in 1994, might
be thought to clear up the matter, but instead it complicates them. Whatever
the truth, the riskiness of polar exploration comes through in Byrd's diary
and notes, which mention coming through storms and icebergs, as well as
allude to the fate of Robert Scott, who perished in the race to the
South Pole with Roald Amundsen (who perished in the race with Byrd to overfly
the North Pole). A concluding section discusses Byrd's competition
with Lindbergh to be the first flier across the Atlantic. 168 pgs., 6"x
9", hdbd.
.....#0005379 2 0005379
0595214541
by Christopher Pala
Book Description When Christopher Pala first landed at the North Pole, he fell so
much in love with it that he took his girlfriend to ride the polar
treadmill on what he mischievously called the First Expedition to
Nowhere. For a week, the couple skied every day to the pole, pitched their
tent and drifted away from it as they slept.
1585741167Arctic
Grail: The Quest for the North West Passage and the North Pole, 1818-1909
by Pierre Berton
Journey across the ice with a Who's Who of polar explorers, men of
every temperament, including the pious and ambitious Edward Perry,
the first explorer to probe deep into the Arctic labyrinth; Adolphus Greely,
a Civil War veteran who had to watch his men starve to death on Ellesmere
Island;
13.97 1585741167
1871
0451409353
0451409353Fatal
North : Adventure and Survival Aboard USS Polaris, The First U.S. Expedition
to the North Pole by Bruce B. Henderson
In 1871, the U.S. sent a navy steamer, the Polaris, on a quest to
discover the North Pole. Like all the countries that had tried before,
the U.S. would soon face a disaster. Although numerous flaws in the plan
jeopardized the mission before the Polaris ever set sail, Henderson jumps
right into the expedition without going into much detail about the brewing
conflicts that would soon erupt and threaten the lives of the explorers
and the pride of the country
16.07 0451409353
1912
0300089678
0300089678The
Coldest March: Scott`s Fatal Antarctic Expedition 0300089678by
Susan Solomon
amazone.com
The icy deaths of Robert Falcon Scott and his companions on their return
from the South Pole in 1912 made them English icons of courage and
sacrifice. Soon, however, Scott's judgments and decisions were questioned,
and his reputation became one of inept bungler rather than heroic
pioneer. Susan Solomon, senior scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration in Colorado, approaches Scott's story from a meteorologist's
point of view. She shows that the three weeks from February 27 to
March 19, during which the explorers fell further and further behind the
daily distances they had to cover in order to survive, were far colder
than normal. Unusual blizzards of wet snow had already slowed the party
and depleted their provisions and strength. Without these once-in-a-decade
phenomena, Solomon believes the party would have returned to its base on
the Ross Sea--second after Roald Amundsen in the race to the
Pole, but safely. She opens each chapter with comments from a hypothetical
modern visitor to Antarctica, presumably to give a wider context
to the human drama of the last century, though this reviewer finds them
inappropriate. She enriches her narratives of Scott's two Antarctic expeditions
with vintage photographs and tables of meteorological data that highlight
the explorers' achievements. Their determination was pitted against the
worst weather in the world. Scott's story has been told many times
before, but its weather information makes The Coldest March a useful addition
to the literature. --John Stevenson
20.97 0300089678
1914-1917 074322292X
074322292XSouth
with Endurance: Shackleton's Antarctic Expedition, 1914-1917 by Frank Hurley
THE DEFINITIVE AND SPELLBINDING RECORD OF SHACKLETON'S LEGENDARY
ANTARCTIC EXPEDITION,
IMMORTALIZED ON FILM BY PIONEERING PHOTOGRAPHER FRANK HURLEY Sir Ernest Shackleton's trans-Antarctic expedition of 1914-1917
was one of the great feats of human endurance -- one vividly captured in
the powerful and dramatic pictures taken by Frank Hurley, the expedition's
official photographer. These images, appearing together here for
the first time in print, constitute an amazing body of photojournalism.