From Publishers Weekly
The retrofitted U.S. Navy tugboat
Polaris set out on an expedition for the North Pole in 1872. After getting stuck among ice floes off the coast of Greenland for months, its multinational crew of 25 (plus eight women and children) were separated, with half trapped on the ship and the others trapped on an ice floe onto which they had temporarily decamped. Poet and novelist Heighton (
The Shadow Boxer) brilliantly riffs off (and presents snippets of) the diary and memoir of real-life Lt. George Tyson, who was among the ice floe denizens; they survived seven more months before being rescued. When the captain dies under mysterious circumstances, Heighton focuses on Kruger, a German nonconformist who believes "the idiot willingness to take sides is what feeds the abattoir of history." Latent romantic feelings between Kruger and the group's married Esquimau translator, Tukulito, or "Hannah," further complicate an already desperate situation. Tyson, who eventually took command, skillfully manages to steer the diminishing floe to waters frequented by sealers and steamers. Heighton is terrific on the group's isolation and Tyson's often laconic responses to it. He's less good in dramatizing the postexpedition lives of Tukulito, Tyson and Kruger, but this novel's scale, its delight in detail and its psychological insight make it an exceptionally satisfying adventure.
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From Booklist
Heighton revisits the catastrophe of the 1871
Polaris expedition, in which 19 members of the crew were cast adrift on the ice off the coast of Greenland. Using the historical record to ground his fictional recounting of what happened once these men, women, and children were accidentally separated from the ship, he then allows his imagination to supply the stories behind the tension that drove the small group apart. Heighton also follows the lives of three of the survivors after their rescue, showing how easily memories can become flawed in the light of public approval and how casually events can be interpreted in many different ways. Ultimately, Heighton suggests that surviving on the ice is the easy thing to do when compared to life in a waiting world with its own ideas about exploration and bravery. It is never easy choosing sides in any drama, shows the author, and it is even more difficult to explain those choices in the years that follow.
Colleen MondorCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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