Ice Blink is very readable; it's captivating and dramatic. It seeks to piece together the Franklin Expedition (1845, British, two ships trying to find the Northwest Passage, ~135 men, tragically all died, ships gone) based on the information available and knowledge of polar exploration from other expeditions around the same time period. It does lean very heavily into phrases like "more than likely" and "undoubtedly" which pushed it in terms of being strictly non-fiction. When addressing cannibalism, I thought it got melodramatic.
There were some factual problems in the book. When talking about the second in command, Captain Crozier, the author is trying to emphasize that he was always passed over for things because he was common and not Church of England and explains that while he travelled to Antarctica with Ross, Ross had the Ross Ice Shelf and Ross Sea named after him, while nothing was named after Crozier. But- Cape Crozier? Immortalized in The Worst Journey in the World?
The author focused on the canned goods brought along, tainted and spoiling. The description of the canning process and food safety in 1845 was horrific. But the author put a lot of faith in the canned goods protecting them from scurvy and canned meat and carrots weren't going to have enough vitamin C to provide any protection regardless of the quality. I could go on and on about scurvy and this book. There were other little facts through the book that were incorrect, which made me distrust other information.
In the afterword the author talks about what a genuinely good person Franklin was, but determines that he was an unlucky man. That immediately made me think of Amundsen's quote about luck:
“Victory awaits him who has everything in order, luck some people call it. Defeat is certain for him who has neglected to take necessary precautions in time; this is called bad luck.” Franklin was British; he was likely promoted above other more qualified men because he was the right class and breeding. The British weren't known for taking all the necessary precautions in polar exploration; they shunned the knowledge of other cultures. Ultimately it was 1845. It wasn't possible for the British to discover the Northwest Passage. What a terrible tragedy for these men.
I knew the basics of the Franklin Expedition, but this was my first non-fiction book about the expedition. I enjoyed reading it, but I don't think it was the most informative book I could have read on the topic. And I have to address that the afterword throws in this:
"When the expedition embarked, it shipped a total of 130 men, 4 midshipmen, a dog named Neptune, and a pet monkey named Jacko."
The first mention of a monkey being on this Arctic expedition was on the third to last page of the book!? I really need to know more.