Punk’s Reviews > To the End of the Earth: Our Epic Journey to the North Pole and the Legend of Peary and Henson > Status Update
Punk
is on page 80 of 321
In 1819, William Edward Parry commanded the Hecla, not, as this book would have it, the Helca.
— Jan 21, 2013 09:24AM
Like flag
Punk’s Previous Updates
Punk
is on page 255 of 321
"While some have suggested that Marvin was in fact killed by one of his Inuit dog drivers, most historians seem to agree that it was simply a tragic accident." [citation needed]
— Jan 23, 2013 10:12AM
Punk
is on page 108 of 321
I hate this guy. On adding two female dogs to their all-male dog team: "Governments are always extolling the virtues of businesses having a mixed workforce, so I guess one could say we were doing our bit for equal opportunity."
— Jan 22, 2013 09:44AM
Punk
is on page 59 of 321
"So accustomed did [the Inuit] become to life in the Arctic that centuries later, Western explorers would eventually learn that the only way to survive in the Far North was to embrace the Inuit way of life..." What the--? First, this sentence makes no sense because, second, the Inuit didn't become "accustomed" to life in the Arctic, they developed skills & technology that allowed them to live in that hostile climate.
— Jan 19, 2013 09:37AM
Punk
is on page 42 of 321
Avery says Herbert estimated that Peary missed the Pole by 60 miles, which isn't the number I remember, but I can't find that section in Herbert's book and Avery's book doesn't have any sources listed. Clever.
— Jan 17, 2013 10:27AM
Punk
is on page 25 of 321
It's like this was written by a bullshitting 6th grader the night before their book report was due: "Like Peary, I've always been a dreamer, with an insatiable desire to do something different with my life. Ever since my childhood, Dad has always told me to 'Carpe diem,' literally 'Seize the day,' with the result that I have always had a single-minded determination to fulfill my destiny, whatever it might be."
— Jan 16, 2013 09:12AM
Punk
is on page 11 of 321
This guy's coming off as a priviledged dickbag: "Convincing an organization to pay for me and my friends to go gallivanting off to some far-flung corner of the globe was an exhausting, demoralizing, and hapless task."
— Jan 02, 2013 05:44PM
Punk
is on page 7 of 321
This guy has the nerve to call Peary a "committed family man"? Peary was away from his family for years at a time, even though his wife and daughter begged him to come home. He missed the birth and death of one of his children. He had an affair with an Inuit woman and a child by her. I'd say Avery and I must have read different books, but they were the same books. What a fool.
— Jan 02, 2013 09:29AM

