Interesting if not well-written biography of Titus Oates, emphasizing his patrician background, his dyslexia and reading and examination problems, his love for horses, and his distaste for Scott. The Oates family gave no cooperation to the book, presumably because it ends with “A second tragedy”, the story of an illegitimate daughter about whom Oates knew nothing. He clearly didn’t do a lot of reading but he had Napier’s History of the Peninsular War and was an admirer of Napoleon (see p. 102 and 245) and had his portrait at Cape Evans.
I Am Just Going Outside: Captain Oates—Antarctic Tragedy.
Smith, Michael. Staplehurst, Kent, UK: Spellmount [2002].
- 1910-14 British National Antarctic Expedition (Scott on Terra Nova).
- Antarctic Reading: Expeditions
Preview
Shackleton: By Endurance We Conquer.
Smith, Michael. London: Oneworld Publications, 2014.
- Heroic Age 1901-1921.
- Antarctic Reading: Expeditions
Preview
This full-scale biography of Shackleton, though not terribly well written is a well-balanced combination of adulation and judicious criticism of Shackleton the man, his psychological difficulties always moderated during times of crisis. The book often lacks the drama of the best Shackleton narratives and yet is well worth reading.
Tom Crean: Unsung Hero of the Scott and Shackleton Antarctic Expeditions.
Smith, Michael. Seattle, WA: Mountaineers Books [2001].
- Heroic Age 1901-1921.
- Antarctic Reading: Expeditions
Preview
There is not much about Crean’s reading or even his education (minimal). There is this passage from a time ashore at Cape Evans in 1911: