Having really loved Ranulph Fiennes's Shackleton, I thought I'd go back and try out this one. I was not disappointed. This was amazing, both in what it was telling and how it was telling it.
I only knew bits and pieces about what happened to Scott and his subsequent legacy, so I was going into this more or less blind. My area is mid-19th century British polar exploration and although I do feel Antarctic exploration is pretty timeless, there are huge differences in terms of funding, preparation, goals and personalities sometimes. The theme that unites them though is how hostile the environment is and just how much endurance the human body and mind has to go through. In that way, I think Ranulph Fiennes is the perfect person to write a biography of Scott (and Shackleton), having done so much (and more) of what they did. He understands the extreme climates and the insane experiences someone has to go through in the far north or far south.
I saw in the other reviews that this book would also include a debunking of the debunking of Scott's character, mainly in relation to Roland Huntford's Last Place on Earth/Scott and Amundsen, which absolutely assassinated Scott and what he did and how he did it. There are glimpses of this throughout, with the final two chapters dedicated specifically to why and how Scott's legacy has been examined and re-examined. I found that really interesting, with its basis in how times change and how the British character is one that loves martyrdom and sacrifice and the underdog. Although Ranulph Fiennes claims to be unbiased, I do think there is a little bit of Scott admiration throughout the book, which is totally understandable. I found his deconstruction of Huntford's research and historical points very pertinent to how history is constantly re-evaluated, and how a historical narrative presented as 'fact' can be just as mythic as any other interpretation.
But to the actual history of the book, because that is what gripped me the most. The story of the Terra Nova is such a tragic, powerful, and in ways inspiring narrative. Every chapter, and every event, had me wondering just how someone can survive such things as -60 degrees Celsius, bitter winds, marches through blizzards, the constant danger of hidden crevasses, the risk of getting trapped in ice, all in a very unknown and uncharted continent. Stories of sacrifice and determination, and moreover the bonds of friendship and love, really grab me and this has all of that. I did not expect to get teary over it, considering that does not happen with almost any book I read, but the account of Oates sacrificing himself to try and save his dying friends, and of Scott, Bowers, and Wilson in their tent, knowing that the end was coming and trying to face it bravely, got me. Regardless of what you think about Scott, that way to go is utterly horrific and chilling.
There were a few parts that will stay on with me after having read this, mainly from Scott's diaries and letters. 'For God's sake, look after our people', as well as 'I hope I will be a good memory' shook me, but maybe my favourite was the line from Ulysses on his memorial cairn: 'To seek, to find, and not to yield'.
Overall, this was a great book on someone who has become a controversial personality, but I could not help falling a little in love with Scott while reading this. He was flawed and imperfect, but that was what made this book, and him, so fascinating.