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Sea of Glory: America's Voyage of Discovery: The U.S. Exploring Expedition, 1838-1842

Sea of Glory: America's Voyage of Discovery: The U.S. Exploring Expedition, 1838-1842

List Price: $39.95
Your Price: $15.98
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A very compelling telling
Review: People interested in American History should not pass this up! A re-discovery of our past and fascination in the exploration of the Pacific and Antarctica lost to the discovery of gold in California is vividly read by Dennis Boutsikaris.

A telling of the turbulent leadership of Charles Wilkes is revealed as well as the Naval politics of the pre-civil war.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A very compelling telling
Review: People interested in American History should not pass this up! A re-discovery of our past and fascination in the exploration of the Pacific and Antarctica lost to the discovery of gold in California is vividly read by Dennis Boutsikaris.

A telling of the turbulent leadership of Charles Wilkes is revealed as well as the Naval politics of the pre-civil war.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: draws attention to important american expedition
Review: Philbrick does an exceptional job making a daunting task actually interesting. This isn't the usual type of book I read but the author managed to make it interesting to me. One of the problems though is the sheer amount of characters and people that are involved with this story so at points the reader may almost feel overwhelmed by all these characters. Overall an amusing and informative read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: All the joy of recovered history
Review: Philbrick is undoubtedly one of the finest maritime writers working today. I thought his previous book, on the whaleship Essex, was excellent, but in the breadth of the tale told, Sea of Glory surpasses it. This book deserves wide attention, not the least for helping restore to history a fascinating tale of exploration that has simply vanished from America's history books: A four year journey round the globe, in which the existence of the Antarctic continent is proven, many islands of the South Sea and the Pacific Northwest surveyed for the first time and charted, and thousands upon thousands of plant, animal, and ethnographic specimens collected, which became the founding collections of the Smithsonian. Indeed, Philbrick makes clear that many US scientific organizations owe their start to the "US Ex Ex."

In addition to US Ex Ex's accomplishments, Philbrick tells of many, sometimes deadly, adventures -- ships wrecked and battered by storms, encounters with island natives, even a very short "war."

Finally, there is the all important human element: One reason the US Ex Ex vanished was the way the journey ended -- in courts martial and wrangling. The commander of the expedition, Wilkes, managed to turn his many young officers from ardent admirers into bitter enemies, through his fierce ambitions, paranoia, and other deep personal flaws -- which in turn may have colored Melville's portrait of Captain Ahab in Moby Dick.

I'm very glad to have found this book. Be sure to look through the excellent bibliography as well, which is a goldmine of sources for more information on US expeditions and early science.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "Ex. Ex."cellent!
Review: There is much to admire in this book about this "U.S. Ex. Ex.", but what I liked most was the balanced treatment of the protagonist. It would have been easy to turn this book into a scathing diatribe against "Captain" Wilkes, but, while appropriately describing Wilkes as a martinet, Mr. Philbrick also emphasizes his perserverance and courage that resulted in the many accomplishments of the expedition. A poignant moment comes when Philbrick relates how the rejection by one of the officers of Wilkes's clumsy offer of reconciliation may have scuttled the Expedition's place in history.

The book is well illustrated and includes several useful maps.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent
Review: This author writes very well and captivates you from the first pages. The history of this voyage is fascinating and was unknown to me. That, combined with the well drawn characters make for a very interesting and enjoyable read. This author manages to write a historical story that keeps you interested without having to "invent" dialogue or enhance the characters to make them more interesting.

I read this author's In the Heart of the Sea (Excellent!), and became interested in the seafaring genre and can also recommend Batavia's Graveyard (riveting) and the Pirate Hunter.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Stunning, Complete, and Even
Review: This book is astounding. Philbrick is even-handed, clear, and thorough. This book chronicles a time in American maritime history that has previously been almost totally overlooked.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Missing History Recovered
Review: This book is outstanding. How can such a piece of history go missing? Through these pages, Philbrook has provided us with an important nautical accomplishment. You will be taken around the world with a crew that is under the command of a most peculiar character. You will travel to various islands in the Atlantic and Pacific, the Antarctic (my personal favorite), South America, visit North America of a time past, and, perhaps most interestingly, you will travel in the minds of those who embarked on this journey. You will return from this journey with the realization that its discoveries are still within your own reach. Really.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Excellent, but depressing
Review: This fabulous narrative is marred by the depressing nature of the events being described. The accomplishments of the US Ex.Ex. were colossal, and in fact dependent on the incredible energy and abilities of its tyrannical and unstable commander, Lt. Wilkes. The politics and infighting which consumed the return of the expedition are described in so much detail as to bring us down at the end. The fact that this amazing journey of discovery has vanished into obscurity due to the human failings of its commander and officers, and the various government and Navy functionaries who participated in the courts martial, rings true and yet tastes bitter. For me, the triumph of pettiness and the worst of human nature drags the book down unfairly, because it is written extremely well.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sea adventure with a twist
Review: This is a tale of oceangoing adventure and discovery with a twist. The twist is that the leader of the expedition, instead of being brave and fair and highly competent, is a coward, an egomaniac, and a terrible seaman. This is the source of a lot of conflict between Wilkes and his men, and conflict certainly makes for interesting reading.

In the end, we confront the question: would the expedition have been better served with a more conventional (Cook-like) captain? Or did Wilkes' self-absorption lead him to even greater feats?


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