A Story of Bravery and Grit.
‘'A N* Explorer at the North Pole’’ by Matthew Alexander Hanson is a story of absolute grit, passion and purpose.
From Cape Columbia onwards, walking on ice and deep snow, pulling half-a-ton sleds for hundreds of kilometres in the deathly cold whilst, either consciously or unconsciously knowing that, under you, rests absolute darkness and frozen death for at least a mile deep (darkness that, sadly, Professor Marvin, Henson's colleague, met to his own demise). In Henson's own words: ''My good, kind friend was never again to see us, or talk with us. It is sad to write this. He went back to his death, drowned in the cold, black water of the Big Lead. In unmarked, unmarbled grave, he sleeps his last, long sleep.'' (Henson, Matthew Alexander. A N* Explorer at the North Pole (p. 81). Kindle Edition.)
Hanson’s book is a demonstration of pure courage, dedication and comradeship in a time where segregation was still rampant (the title of the book, which I have to necessarily censor every time I mention it, being a token of that statement).
A part of me believed, while reading, that the route to the pole was fairly straightforward. Very few incidents happened and the big challenges ended up being the journey in itself, which was monstrously heavy and long. You got to have an unshakeable sense of grit to move forward even though you know what’s coming (about half a thousand miles pulling a half-a-ton sled in sadistically frozen conditions, for weeks on end). I have to say, Sisyphus’ condemnation to pushing a boulder up a hill for eternity doesn’t look so bleak anymore.
I wish Hanson had talked more about how he felt about the journey, his impressions and thoughts on the events that happened along the journey. Instead, the book ended up being laid out in a way that closely resembles the paragons of « captain logs » of ships and expeditions; a bare description of the facts and nothing more.
That said, it was an interesting read. Recommended to those who love books about expeditions and adventures. Slightly less recommended to those who prefer books that discuss, in-depth, how the protagonist felt and interpreted the events that happened to him. If that’s you, you might not like the book that much, as you don’t get to really meet who the man behind the pen is.
I'll give the book a 4/5.
As a fan of polar expeditions and stories of survival in barren lands, I enjoyed the book.