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Second On the Trail of Genghis Khan.
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Third On the Trail of Genghis Khan
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I'll nominate Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne.
Everyones heard of it, and it is available everywhere. :) |
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I'll third Allan Quartermain. I'd love to finally read a Quartermain book. I don't think any of us were around when the first book was selected for the club, but these novels aren't so long so I wouldn't mind catching up on the first one before I read this one, if it wins. Together they are still less pages than last month's selection of Outlander and some of this month's nominations.
I am hoping the Verne doesn't win the month since a Verne book won the last Travel/Adventure month. |
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Second Sailing Alone Around the World.
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By the way, for anyone not familiar with Mrs. Slocombe, I should probably add that I'm not just posting vulgarities, though the risqué double entendre is very strong with her. She often talks about her cat, which she likes to call her pussy. I felt a bit dirty writing it and still can't quite believe it was allowed so freely on national television (and so many times!).
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I'd like to nominate Beyond the Horizon by Colin Angus.
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I second Beyond the Horizon.
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I third Journey to the Center of the Earth.
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I nominate South: The Endurance Expedition to Antarctica by Ernest Shackleton.
This is one of the most astonishing and heroic true stories ever told. Shackleton's expedition to Antarctica and his amazing exploits are the stuff of legend. One reader on the Amazon site had this to say: "If you thought you were a hard man - read this book, THEY were hard men. They never complained - except that -20°F was too warm!! Hard to credit this happened not quite a century ago. Rubbish equipment, rubbish food, no contact with the outside world for months at a time. A walk over South Georgia, over the glaciers at 4000 feet in rotten boots and torn clothing! Barely believable. After reading this you will think twice about complaining about anything ever again!!!" It is available free from Project Gutenberg and Amazon or one can buy it in a number of formats quite easily and inexpensively. There is also a fascinating DVD about the expedition. |
While I would like to read The Right Stuff, I can't find it at my library. Instead, I will second South: The Endurance Expedition which I have considered a couple times before. Maybe this will give me the incentive to actually read it.
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