Forum menu
Definitive list of ...
 

[Closed] Definitive list of adventure books!

 MSP
Posts: 15842
Free Member
Topic starter
 
[#11403337]

Since it is so hard to travel at the moment, looking to read about travel adventures, mountaineering and exploring etc and or the people who do it (as long as they are interesting and not just famous). So stuff like

Touching the void
Journey to the centre of the earth
Phsycovertical
and maybe some offbeat suggestions like "round Ireland with a fridge"

So what do you suggest goes on the list?


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 7:22 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

3 men in a boat?


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 7:28 pm
Posts: 46109
Full Member
 


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 7:42 pm
Posts: 9975
Full Member
 

The worst journey in the world by cherry Apsley Goddar

Iink

Annapurna by Maurice Hertzog

Link

I'm sure I'll think of more


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 7:48 pm
Posts: 4954
Free Member
 

goran kropp my ultimate high.

Guy cycles from Sweden to Nepal with all the gear to climb Everest (including rations), climbs without oxygen and Not using the ice ladders everyone else uses, then cycles back
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Ultimate-High-My-Everest-Odyssey/dp/156331830X


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 7:50 pm
Posts: 1754
Free Member
 

Clear Waters Rising
Nick Crane walks across the watershed of Europe from Galicia to Istanbul. Well written and done at at a time before the Internet which feels like the middle ages.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 7:57 pm
Posts: 4954
Free Member
 

That reminds me journey to the center of the earth. Another nick crane book.

Bumped into him coming out of Camden Sainsbury's local. #brusheswithfame


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 8:01 pm
Posts: 455
Free Member
 

Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage
by Alfred Lansing

Amazing. Proper hard.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 8:03 pm
Posts: 6940
Full Member
 

W.B. 'Sandy' Thomas
Dare to be Free

War angle but basically escape and evasion through Greece, so qualifies as adventure

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Dare-Free-Cassell-Military-Paperbacks/dp/0304366390


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 8:04 pm
 DezB
Posts: 54367
Free Member
 

Wild by Cheryl Strayed

127 Hours sorta counts too


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 8:11 pm
 csb
Posts: 3288
Free Member
 

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1128511.Adventure_Cycle_Touring_Handbook

A bit old on kit recommendations now but the classic 1900s adventures and the 'on bike winery' are inspirational.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 8:23 pm
Posts: 6935
Full Member
 

Just read a couple of Jon Krakenauer books - Into Thin Air and Into the Wild - both pretty well-written


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 8:36 pm
 FFJA
Posts: 400
Free Member
 

A bit niche but “The Darkness Beckons” by Martyn Farr is a history of cave diving and is a classic.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 8:41 pm
Posts: 1334
Free Member
 

I wanted to say anything about Shackleton but already mentioned.
So will mention Hunter of Peace.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 8:46 pm
Posts: 3016
Full Member
 

The Boardman and Tasker mountaineering books are excellent.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 8:48 pm
Posts: 1787
Full Member
 

Sailing Alone Around the World by Joshua Slocom (victorian sea captain retires then does as the titles suggests over a couple of years in a smallish boat, the first person to do so)

A Time of Gifts by Patrick Leigh Fermor
(In December 1933 he sets of from the Hook of Holland to walk to Istanbul. It takes over a year and this is the first book of 3 taking us from the start to the Hungarian border in the Middle Danube)


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 8:54 pm
Posts: 13554
Free Member
 

Bill Bryson for something a bit lighter. Anthony Lawrence for wildlife shennanigans, including rescuing animals from Baghdad zoo in the middle of the gulf war and trying to track down Joseph Kony to help protect the black rhino. The Reluctant Traveller by Bill Lumley is a very funny book by a guy who really didn't want to go on an adventure


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 8:55 pm
Posts: 426
Free Member
 

A Time of Gifts and Between the Woods and the Water By Patrick Leigh Fermor. Starting with Fermor as an 18 year old setting off in 1933 on his own to walk from the North Sea to Turkey. A lost pre-war Europe.

Or what about The White Spider by Henirich Harrer - it's about the first ascent of the North Face of the Eiger but also recounts the previous failed attempts - some of which are harrowing. Unbelievable that Stech did it in under two and half hours.

Edit: 5 minutes too late!


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 8:59 pm
Posts: 46109
Full Member
 

The Darkness Beckons

Quite harrowing in places iirc. Good read though.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 9:00 pm
 Spin
Posts: 7808
Free Member
 

A Time of Gifts by Patrick Leigh Fermour is good when he shuts up giving history lessons and talks about drinking and shagging.

Edit: beaten to it.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 9:00 pm
Posts: 3642
Free Member
 

Wind, Sand and Stars (Anton De Saint Exupery)

https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.264850/page/n281/mode/2up


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 9:00 pm
Posts: 2882
Free Member
 

Great idea for a thread!

From a sailing perspective;

Bernard Moitissier - the long way.
-Story of the first round the world, non stop yacht race. Moitissier was half adventurer half philosopher with a wonderful perspective on life.

The unlikely voyage of Jack de crow.
- mildy eccentric English teacher rows a sailing dinghy from Wales to the Black Sea.

Any of the "mischief in... (patagonia/greenland etc" books by H W Tillman.
- proper hard nut who sailied his old wooden boat to far ends of the earth to do first ascents on big mountains.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 9:06 pm
Posts: 4309
Full Member
 

Ellen mcarthur’s taking on the world and race against time are worth a read


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 9:14 pm
Posts: 1334
Free Member
 

Second Bill Bryson they are hilarious.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 9:21 pm
Posts: 5976
Free Member
 

Travels with Charley in search of America.

Because it's Steinbeck and thus obviously great.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 9:23 pm
Posts: 58
Free Member
 

The jungle is neutral by Freddy Spencer-chapman

Outrageous refusal to succumb to a grim list of tropical diseases whilst fighting behind Japanese lines and trying to organise Chinese communist guerillas

Proper boys own stuff


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 9:27 pm
Posts: 3074
Free Member
 

Lots of good suggestions already (Crane, Heyerdahl, Herzog, Kropp, Krakauer, Farr, Shackleton). My personal hero is Eric Shipton but his books are a bit dry and his definitive story is yet to be written.

Roland Huntford's biography of Shackleton is awesome, as is his book on Amundsen and Scott.

'Trespassers on the Roof of the World' by Peter Hopkirk, and 'The Great Game' by the same author.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 9:30 pm
Posts: 3074
Free Member
 

The Ravens.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 9:40 pm
Posts: 426
Free Member
 

My personal hero is Eric Shipton but his books are a bit dry and his definitive story is yet to be written.

They can be a bit dry but A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush is good, as is The Last Grain Race.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 9:42 pm
 Spin
Posts: 7808
Free Member
 

My personal hero is Eric Shipton but his books are a bit dry and his definitive story is yet to be written.

They can be a bit dry but A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush is good, as is The Last Grain Race

They were Eric Newby not Shipton.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 9:46 pm
Posts: 9975
Full Member
 

They can be a bit dry but A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush is good, as is The Last Grain Race

They were Eric Newby


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 9:47 pm
Posts: 1957
Free Member
 

Not quite epic adventure but Raw Spirit by Iain Banks travelling around distilleries in Scotland is one of my favourites.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 9:48 pm
Posts: 426
Free Member
 

hey were Eric Newby not Shipton.

Doh! Of course.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 10:00 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Not a book but an article.

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/02/12/the-white-darkness

The selfie is epic.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 10:06 pm
Posts: 32
Full Member
 

Last Blue Mountain Ralph Barker is harrowing,but an amazing tale - think Touching the Void without the happy ending


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 10:09 pm
Posts: 211
Free Member
 

The White Spider.

And as above - South! By Shackleton, plus Boardman/Tasker omnibus.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 10:18 pm
Posts: 26891
Full Member
 

Touching the void

Touching the Void film was my sons Isolation geography lesson today!!
Reminded me that I have a book by Simon Yates (the one who cut the rope) called Against the Wall, really enjoyed it, kind of bought things full circle.

No Picnic on Mount Kenya is a good one too

There are not many people who would break out of a P.O.W. camp, trek for days across perilous terrain before climbing the north face of Mount Kenya with improvised equipment, meagre rations, and with a picture of the mountain on a tin of beef among their more accurate guides. There are probably fewer still who would break back in to the camp on their return.

But this is the remarkable story of three such men. No Picnic on Mount Kenya is a powerful testament to the human spirit of revolt and adventure in even the darkest of places.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 10:21 pm
Posts: 4209
Free Member
 

The jungle is neutral by Freddy Spencer-chapman

I was going to mention that - he also wrote Watkins' Last Expedition, the story of Gino Watkins' pioneering (and for him, fatal) Greenland Expedition in 1931.

For another insight into Inuit culture and some more unusual adventures, Peter Freuchen, Arctic Adventure: My Life in the Frozen North


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 10:26 pm
Posts: 230
Free Member
 

The Ascent of Rum Doodle.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Ascent-Rum-Doodle-Vintage-Classics/dp/0099530384


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 10:28 pm
 Nick
Posts: 3693
Full Member
 

Papillon - I'm sure Henri Charriere embellished his autobiography, but even if half of it is true it surely must be up there with the greatest of human adventure stories

Carrying the Fire - Michael Collins - literally out of this world, great read

Killing Dragons - Fergus Fleming - about the "conquest" of the Alps, fascinating


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 10:33 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

South by Ernest Shackleton.

Get it straight from the horse’s mouth. Absolutely amazing book and, if you look around, you can find it for free since it’s so old. I found it on kindle but Gutenberg have it too

https://www.gutenberg.org/files/5199/5199-h/5199-h.htm


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 10:36 pm
Posts: 2464
Full Member
 

Mentioned above but a second for Into The Wild by John Krakauer. Great book. Also slightly off topic but Waterlog by Roger Deakin is a classic in my opinion. Very rarely do I read a book more than once but this is one I keep coming back to.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 10:38 pm
 Spin
Posts: 7808
Free Member
 

One of my favourite short travel/adventure stories is Travels with a Donkey by Pete Livesey. Here it is: http://footlesscrow.blogspot.com/2012/10/travels-with-donkey.html?m=1

Pete Livesey was a caver, how much else of the story is true I have no idea.


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 10:48 pm
Posts: 16383
Free Member
 

Can I squeeze my dad's book in? He was always into travel and adventure and this is the story of his last trip. Hopefully shows how anyone can be an adventurer.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Driving-Dark-Africa-Accidental-Adventurer-ebook/dp/B013J8DXJO


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 10:56 pm
Posts: 66115
Full Member
 

These Are The Days That Must Happen To You by Dan Walsh. Great stories, occasionally beautifully told. “It’s not an endurance test, it’s going on holiday on a bike…. Anyone can, but not everyone needs to.”


 
Posted : 28/09/2020 10:57 pm
Page 1 / 2