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Extreme landscapes don’t just set the scene they decide the rules. In the heart of a scorching desert, on a frozen glacier, or atop a wind battered mountain ridge, survival isn’t guaranteed. The environment shapes the story, pushes characters to their limits, and reveals truths they might never have faced otherwise.
Tracks by Robyn Davidson is a memoir of her 1,700-mile solo trek across the Australian desert with camels. It’s a powerful story of solitude, endurance, and transformation in a harsh landscape.
The Sheltering Sky by Paul Bowles explores existential despair as an American couple navigates the vast Sahara Desert, where the relentless heat and isolation become metaphors for human fragility.
Skeletons on the Zahara by Dean King recounts a true story of shipwreck survivors stranded on Africa’s desert coast in 1815, battling starvation and madness as the desert tests their very survival.
These books show how the land can become more than a backdrop it becomes a living, unforgiving force shaping every moment.
If you have any other books you read which feels closely related to this one's please tell
68 sats \ 1 reply \ @Scoresby 5h
I once read a story about the USS Jeanette, an expedition that got trapped in the ice. Can't remember the name of the particular book. But it started a decade long obsession with polar exploration for me.
Some notable reads:
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Haven't read them but I saw a flim based on Farthest North, It’s about Nansen’s Arctic expedition and how they tried to reach the North Pole by drifting with the ice. I have to make it my next read thx.
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