This edition includes a modern introduction and a list of suggested further reading.
Since Robert Falcon Scott’s expedition to the South Pole in 1910-1912, controversy has raged about the correct interpretation of and explanation for the tragedy. Some writers have drawn a picture of Scott as a bumbling incompetent, whose lack of experience and preparation condemned his men to their deaths. Aspley Cherry-Garrard’s account
The Worst Journey in the World written ten years after his narrow escape from the fate of his companions tells another side of the story. Here he portrays Scott as a fearless and noble leader whose only thought upon his death was concern for his companions on the expedition and for his wife and child.
The questions raised by the fate of the British Antarctic Expedition of the
Terra Nova remain evocative and unsettling: What sort of man was Scott? What was at stake in the race to claim the South Pole? Why did these men perish, and what was their legacy? Ten years after his narrow escape from the fate of his companions Cherry-Garrard attempts to answer these daunting questions in
The Worst Journey in the World (1922).
عن المؤلف
Apsley Cherry-Garrard was born on January 2, 1886, in Belford, England, the only son of Major-General Apsley Cherry-Garrard. His family had been lords of the manor of Lamer since the mid-sixteenth century, but Cherry-Garrard was much more interested in travel and adventure than the life of an English country gentleman. Because of his extremely poor eyesight, Cherry-Garrard was an unlikely candidate to join Scott on his expedition to the South Pole. He was, however, persistent, and Scott agreed to take him. Cherry-Garrard (nicknamed ‘Cherry’ or ‘The Cheery One’), age twenty-four, became the youngest of the thirty-three-member expedition and one of its survivors.