I May Be Some Time

Francis Spufford

A classic study of the expeditions to the South Pole that asks why we are so fascinated with exploring vast, empty, and extreme landscapes.

4 in stock

£12.99
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780571346783
Date Published
05.07.2018
Delivery
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Summary

‘A truly majestic work of scholarship, thought and literary imagination.’ Jan Morris, The Times
‘Shot through with crystalline brilliance.’ Washington Post
‘Fascinating.’ Sunday Times

When Captain Scott died in 1912 on his way back from the South Pole, his story became a myth embedded in the national imagination. Everyone remembers the doomed Captain Oates’s last words: ‘I’m just going outside, and I may be some time.’ Francis Spufford’s celebrated and prize-winning history shows how Scott’s death was the culmination of a national enchantment with vast empty spaces, the beauty of untrodden snow, and perilous journeys to the end of the earth.

Winner of the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award, the Writers’ Guild Non-Fiction Book of the Year and the Banff Mountain Book Prize.

FrancisSpufford

Francis Spufford is the author of five highly-praised works of non-fiction, most frequently described by reviewers as either ‘bizarre’ or ‘brilliant’, and usually as both. His debut novel Golden Hill won the Costa First Novel Award, the RSL Ondaatje Prize, the Desmond Elliott Prize, and was shortlisted for the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction, the Rathbones Folio Prize, the…

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