Fergus Fleming
Personal Information
Description
Fergus Fleming is a British writer and editor. A noted travel writer like his other uncle Peter Fleming, Fergus Fleming now co-runs his uncle Ian Fleming's former publishing house, Queen Anne Press. He is the author of stories of exploration and adventure such as Barrow’s Boys and a biography of his uncle, The Man With The Golden Typewriter: Ian Fleming's James Bond Letters. Source: thebookseller.com
Books
The explorer's eye
Combining firsthand accounts with original images in vintage black and white and brilliant color, The Explorer's Eye, gives insights into who these men and women were, how they operated, and what they saw. Here you have Alexander von Humboldt braving the electric eels of South Africa, Umberto Nobile lamenting the loss of his Zeppelin in an ice floe, and Jacques Cousteau examining the planet from under the waves. Drawing on a multinational archive of explorer s logs, with expert commentary to set each expedition in context and an introduction by Michael Palin, this book is a unique look at the world we inhabit.
Ninety Degrees North
It was once believed that the North Pole was surrounded by an open polar sea. Some of the attempts to prove this theory and to reach the pole itself once the theory was abandoned are the subject of this book. Fleming, author of the critically acclaimed Barrow's Boys, provides an entertaining history of the many failed attempts to reach the North Pole, from the hardship of the Kane expedition of 1853 through the Amundsen-Ellsworth North Pole sighting via airship in 1926. Though not all polar attempts in this time period are covered, many of the major attempts are recounted and analyzed, providing a story that is both awe-inspiring and humorous. Drawing on research from published and unpublished accounts, Fleming tells the stories of the failed land/sea attempts by such polar adventurers as Edward Nares, Fridtjof Nanson, Charles Francis Hall, August Petermann, and George Washington de Long, as well as the fatal attempt by Sweden's Salomon August Andre by balloon. The controversial topic of who first stood at 90-degrees North is not answered here; only through the investigation of Frederick Cook's and Robert Peary's expeditions does the reader learn that neither can conclusively claim this achievement.
Killing Dragons
"Here be dragons" said the old maps. In the late-18th century, a few brave men started to venture up the mountains of Switzerland to discover the secrets hidden in their snowy peaks. Then the British arrived and "mountaineering" was born. This is a history of the conquest of the Alps.
Off the Map
A compilation of entries and excerpts from the journals of William Clark and Meriwether Lewis, describing their historic expedition.
The Cuban missile crisis
See work
The way to eternity
Examines ancient Egyptian myths about the physical world and life after death and places them in their cultural context.
The Stone Age Sentinel
A tabloid-style summary of the "news" from the stone age.
