National Geographic Adventure Magazine's "Extreme Classics: The 100 Greatest Adventure Books of All Time"

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(from nationalgeographic.com:)

Extreme Classics: The 100 Greatest Adventure Books of All Time

What are the essential ingredients in a great adventure story? The Latin root of the word, oddly enough, means "an arrival," but adventure almost always entails a going out, and not just any going out but a bold one: Sail the Pacific on a balsa raft; pit your skills against K2; sledge to the South Pole. It is a quest whose outcome is unknown but whose risks are tangible, a challenge someone meets with courage, brains, and effort—and then survives, we hope, to tell the tale.

"Safe return doubtful," as the famous apocryphal newspaper ad soliciting Antarctica volunteers put it. No matter: There’s seldom a shortage of applicants. Humans hunger for adventure, and most is voluntary—people choose to go out and explore or climb or fly alone across vast oceans. But sometimes adventure is thrust upon us: A jet crashes in the high Andes, stranding its passengers in the snows. A whale staves and sinks a ship. These, too, are tests of courage, endurance, resourcefulness. We stay up all night reading to see what happens.

Such stories are as old as civilization. The ancient Babylonian epic of Gilgamesh is an adventure story. So are the Odyssey, the Viking sagas, and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. And they have mythological roots: Culture heroes go out into the unknown, endure various tests, bring back a boon—the Golden Fleece; the Holy Grail; the knowledge, at the very least, of strange new lands, strange new people.

The adventurer’s rewards today are more personal but no less considerable. And those of us who stay behind still ask: What was it like? These are the books that answer that question. To help us choose and rank them, we gathered a panel of writers, critics, and other experts. We asked them to help us find the best stories of exploration, survival, and daring recreation—true stories, we should add; fiction is something else. (War stories are something else as well, and not included here.)

It might seem an impossible task to rank 100 great, but very diverse, books in terms of fine gradations of greatness. Yet anyone can tell you why they prefer one book over another. And that’s what our panelists did. We asked them to assign a number of points to each book, taking several factors into account: the book’s pure literary merit; its "adrenaline factor," or the level of excitement they felt reading it; and its impact on our history and culture. When we tallied the scores, we found the books that rose to the top were those that succeed on more than one front: great writing about great deeds.

In order to keep the list focused on adventure—as opposed to travel or nature writing, both of which deserve lists of their own—we excluded books that didn’t involve at least a measure of physical risk or audacity. And we leaned toward first-person accounts over later retellings. Until quite recently, writing about one’s adventures has been largely a luxury of men—and usually white, Western men at that. This is an unfortunate fact of history that a list like this cannot help but reflect, despite our inclusion of some neglected classics by others. Finally, for all the scientific rigor we brought to the task, our rankings reflect the personal tastes of our panelists. Readers may well disagree. So quarrel away. But read.

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  1. 51.
    Travels in Arabia Deserta: Selected Passages
    by Charles M. Doughty

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  2. 53.
    The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom
    by Slavomir Rawicz

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  3. 54.
    Mountaineering in the Sierra Nevada
    by Clarence King

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  4. 57.
    Running the Amazon (The Adventure Library , No 3)
    by Joe Kane

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  5. 60.
    Incidents of travel in Yucatan. By John L. Stephens ...
    by Michigan Historical Reprint Series

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  6. 61.
    Shipwreck of the Whaleship Essex
    by Owen Chase

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  7. 62.
    ?
    Life in the Far West (Classics of the Old West)
    by George F. Ruxton

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  8. 63.
    ?
    Roald Amundsen: - my life as an explorer
    by Roald Amundsen

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  9. 64.
    News from Tartary
    by Peter Fleming

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  10. 65.
    Annapurna: A Woman's Place (20th Anniversary Edition)
    by Arlene Blum

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  11. 66.
    Mutiny on the Bounty (Adventure Classics)
    by William Bligh

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  12. 67.
    Steven Callahan: Adrift at Sea (High Interest Books)
    by Holly Cefrey

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  13. 68.
    Castaways (Latin American Literature and Culture, No 10)
    by Alvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca

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  14. 70.
    Tracks
    by Robyn Davidson

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  15. 71.
    The Adventures of Captain Bonneville: Digested from His Journal.
    by Washington Irving

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  16. 73.
    ?
    FEARFUL VOID P (A Griffin paperback)
    by Geoffrey Moorhouse

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  17. 74.
    No Picnic on Mount Kenya: A Daring Escape, A Perilous Climb
    by Felice Benuzzi

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  18. 75.
    Through the Brazilian Wilderness
    by Theodore Roosevelt

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  19. 76.
    The Road to Oxiana
    by Robert Byron

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  20. 77.
    ?
    Minus 148°
    by Art Davidson

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  21. 79.
    Jaguars Ripped My Flesh
    by Tim Cahill

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  22. 80.
    Journal of a Trapper
    by Russell Osborne

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  23. 81.
    Full Tilt
    by Dervla Murphy

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  24. 82.
    Terra Incognita: Travels in Antarctica
    by Sara Wheeler

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  25. 83.
    ?
    We Die Alone: A WWII Epic of Escape and Endurance
    by David Howarth

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  26. 84.
    Kabloona (Graywolf Rediscovery Series)
    by Gontran De Poncins

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  27. 86.
    Carrying the Fire: An Astronaut's Journeys
    by Michael Collins

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  28. 87.
    ?
    Adventures in the Wilderness; Or, Camp-Life in the Adirondacks, William H. H. Murray.
    by W. H. H. (William Henry Harrison Murray

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  29. 88.
    The Mountains of My Life (Modern Library Exploration)
    by Walter Bonatti

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  30. 89.
    Great Heart: The History of a Labrador Adventure (Kodansha Globe)
    by James West Davidson

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  31. 90.
    Journal of the Voyage to the Pacific
    by Alexander MacKenzie

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  32. 92.
    Silent World (NG Adventure Classics)
    by Jacques Cousteau

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  33. 93.
    Alaska Wilderness: Exploring the Central Brooks Range
    by Robert Marshall

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  34. 96.
    ?
    THE DESCENT OF PIERRE SAINT-MARTIN
    by Norbert / Warrington, John (Trans. ) Casteret

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  35. 97.
    The Crystal Horizon
    by Reinhold Messner

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  36. 99.
    Grizzly Years: In Search of the American Wilderness
    by Doug Peacock

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  37. 100.
    ?
    One Man's Mountains
    by Tom Patey

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Created by hellomagda on Jan 15, 2007.
 

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