The Terra Nova expedition (1910-1913) was Captain Robert F. Scott's second, and final (fatal), attempt at the South Pole. This time around, he brought along professional photographer Herbert Ponting to stay at the base camp and teach Scott, and several others, how to take and develop photographs in the harsh Antarctic environment so that the group could document their scientific endeavors. Not all of Scott's photographs survived, but Wilson gathers up as many as he can and does a solid job of placing them in context.
David Wilson is the great nephew of Edward A. Wilson, a doctor and artist, and the expedition's chief of scientific staff. Dr. Wilson died in 1912 on the return from the pole, and the author is perhaps not all that objective about Scott. One might argue he has a personal stake in Scott being a visionary, a "forward thinker"—as Wilson puts it—rather than a traditional one and the last of the great Victorian explorers, with his man-hauled sledges and dogged pursuit of science in the face of certain death. The author's defensive of Scott and his choices and gets downright bitchy about Shackleton at one point. But Scott's defenders often do, so he's not exactly alone in that. I've seen some nasty things said about Amundsen, too, as many of Scott's fans believe Amundsen stole the pole from him by...getting there faster.
So while the scholarship is questionable (and I caught at least one factual error), the photos are interesting, and they're carefully identified and cross-referenced. The paper's thick and glossy, and the black and white photographs look beautiful. Each photo has a caption to identify (or guess at) landmarks and figures, with a catalogue number and date, if known.
This is a large book, almost a foot square. It shows the photos to their best advantage, but the text is in two columns per page, and is sometimes split across several pages with full-page photographs in between, making it difficult to read. There's no index for the text, but there is a picture index with thumbnails and captions, and relevant page numbers. The text makes good use of end notes with citations for every quote, and when photographs are referenced in the text, the author gives a page number where you can find the photo. I was really impressed with how well the photographs are linked to the text. There was never a moment where I thought to myself, angrily, "What picture is he talking about?!" because without fail Wilson points the reader right to it.
While Wilson's prose is a bit melodramatic, and potentially biased, this is a remarkable visual record of the expedition's day-to-day life at Cape Evans and the camps between it and the pole, as well as the unique challenge of taking photographs in an environment where you get instant frostbite if you take off your gloves, and if you accidentally touch your metal camera with your bare skin, that part of you now belongs to the camera. Knowing what these men went through to take these photographs makes them all the more remarkable, and Wilson encourages the reader to pick up a copy of Scott's diary, often published as Scott's Last Expedition, as a companion to this book; he quotes from it frequently to provide context for the photographs.