The Great Explorers
In this short, lively book, Robin Hanbury-Tenison tells the story of the greatest explorers in history and explains what made them so special and their achievements so extraordinary.
Throughout history, a handful of unusually driven individuals have been inspired to explore the limits of the known world, inspiring us and changing our perceptions of our planet through their courageous adventures. What is it that makes these men and women risk their lives in desperate, often fatal efforts to discover distant and inaccessible places?
Robin Hanbury-Tenison, himself one of the most distinguished explorers of the 20th century, looks at the greatest of their kind in history, bringing their experiences to life in vivid and compelling anecdotes and drawing on their own first-hand accounts. Among the explorers he features are some who are well known, like James Cook and David Livingstone, and some less so, such as Herodotus, the first European to record an expedition and Nain Singh, who walked huge distances to map the forbidden lands of Tibet, counting every pace. And he asks: what was it, and is it, that motivates these unusual people? And how have they enriched our world through their adventures?
PRODUCT INFO
Author: Robin Hanbury-Tenison
ISBN: 9781911187868
Number Of Pages: 128
Publisher: Connell Publishing
Release Date: 2018-09-20
EAN: 9781911187868
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Robin Hanbury-Tenison is a well-known explorer, author, film-maker, conservationist and campaigner. Named by the Sunday Times in 1982 as ‘the greatest explorer of the past 20 years’ and in 1991 as one of the 1,000 ‘Makers of the 20th Century’, he has been on over 30 expeditions. He has been Vice-President and Gold Medallist of the Royal Geographical Society. He has made several films of his expeditions and written many books. He was the editor of The Oxford Book of Exploration.
PRESS REVIEWS
How on earth can we actually READ all those monstrously long books we keep adding to our shelves, however interested we are in the subjects?
And yet we all want to know more – about our past, about our history, about our culture.
Now, at last, there’s an answer. “Mercifully,” says Helen Brown in the Mail, a new series of short books has come along to reduce long, complex topics into short, easily digestible books.
And they’re nothing like the “dry, bullet-pointy style” of GCSE textbooks.