Incorporated in 1905, The Explorers Club in its earliest years met in simple rented rooms. In 1965, the Club bought a Tudor-style mansion on East 70th Street in the historic Upper East Side, where it has remained ever since.
Celebrating its centennial anniversary in 2004, today The Explorers Club is an international society dedicated to the advancement of field research, scientific exploration, and the ideal that it is vital to preserve the instinct to explore.
This volume is dedicated to the spirit of exploration. Assembled by Club member and literary giant George Plimpton, As Told by the Explorer's Club will take you from Amundsen to Lindbergh, from the Arctic to Antarctica, and all points in between.
George Ames Plimpton was an American journalist, writer, editor, actor, and gamesman. He is widely known for his sports writing and for helping to found The Paris Review.
Although many of those whose stories are contained within this book consider 'adventures' a result of poor planning, they nevertheless had marvelous tales to tell. From manning a 'ghostly' station on a very remote Arctic island to roaming with the nomads of the Asian steppes to joining a cheetah hunt (where the cheetahs are used to hunt other animals), these explorers show us a world few of us will ever encounter.
Very eclectic mix of adventure and anthropology. Many of these tales are from the early parts of the 20th century so the marked lack of political corectness towards people of other cultures is pretty striking.
A collection of anecdotes from people who have explored every continent on the globe. Quaint and intriguing, like being with a group of friends and recounting adventures. It's a cozy read and makes you want to go somewhere.
As Told at the Explorers Club: More Than Fifty Gripping Tales of Adventure edited by George Plimpton (Lyons Press 2003) (910.4) is a collection of hunting, mountaineering, and exploring tales by well-situated good old boys. My rating: 7/10, finished 3/8/14.
This was an enjoyable read, it just felt like some of the stories were thrown in for filler. Some of them were great, others were good but just didn't seem to belong in this particular collection.
This is a selection from the previous 3 collections of stories published from 1931 thru 1941. A fourth edition was planned but was shelved as World War II grabbed the world's attention. There are also pieces from "The Explorers Journal" a magazine that has been collecting and publishing tales of expeditions from the founding of The Explorers Club in 1904 through today.
Actually fifty-one tales that range from across Africa, Asia, Alaska, Canada, the Atlantic, Pacific and Arctic oceans, the lower 48 of the United States, Central America, United Kingdom and the final part called "Horizons" which talks about exploration itself and a couple articles about Lowell Thomas.
And Thomas has a couple tales relayed within the book itself - the Khyber Pass to Kabul as well as his remembrances of flying over Palestine and the mention of the travels with T.E. Lawrence. There is also the amusing tale of the mayor of Jerusalem surrendering to the Brits 4 times over a matter of days - first to some Cockney cooks foraging for eggs, then their major, then Brigadier General Watson and finally, for the fourth time, the Commander-in-Chief Allenby. Everyone wanted the credit save the cooks - they just wanted some eggs for their officers' meal.
Other tales include hang-gliding off K2. Hunting with cheetahs. Looking for yeti and okapi. Encounters with king cobras. Witchcraft among the Zulu and the Mongolian compliment by calling a woman a 'beast'. Pitcairn Island 200 years after the mutiny. Lindbergh bailing out over Illinois. Wrestling a Kodiak bear - that was reported by L. Ron Hubbard. Rowing across the Atlantic - Casablanca to Antigua and then the same couple rowing across the Pacific - Callao, Peru to the Galapagos to the Marquesas to American Samoa to Vanuatu to Cairns, Australia. And quite a bit more.
As they are all written by a variety of explorers, some are more readable than others. Admittedly, the earlier ones do convey a sense of the adventurers novels from Burroughs, Haggard, Conan Doyle and Verne.
Full disclosure; I am an elected Fellow of the Explorers Club and have been for years. This was the first time I really dug into this book and while there was some good stuff in it, a lot of it had little to do with actual exploration and was frankly a lot of glorified travel writing that had an embellished tone. I would've given it 3.5 stars but that wasn't possible.
Great book on various Explorers Club adventures. It is broken out by geography and the stories are quick reads in in chapter. I liked that the stories varied on everything from hunting with cheetahs, the Hindu God Ganesha and that to be called a beast in old Mongolian culture is a high compliment.