Lewis and Clark: Voyage of Discovery

by Stephen E. Ambrose

Other authorsSam Abell (Photographer)
Hardcover, 1998

Status

Available

Barcode

10318

Publication

National Geographic Books (1998), Edition: 1, 288 pages

Description

"Interweaves choice entries from the explorers' journals with the author's own latter-day chronicle of how he and his family continue to discover the Trail today."--Jacket.

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

288 p.; 11 inches

User reviews

LibraryThing member Whisper1
This National Geographic book is lavish and contains stunningly beautiful photos with accompanying text that is exceptionally well written!

If you want to learn more about the Lewis and Clark expedition, this is a book to read.

It takes a while to soak in all the beauty of this coffee-table sized
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book because each photo by Sam Abell is so remarkably vivid that you feel as though you are riding in the swift currents of the tumultuous Missouri river, listening to the loud, terrifying growl of the grizzly bear, losing your footage as you slip down steep inclines, freezing as you trudge in sub zero degrees up over the rockies, experiencing the thunderous bellowing of thousands of bison on the plains and encountering American Indians -- some friendly, some connivingly, aggressively deceptive and war like.

Reaching the destination, the reader feels the breathless elation in Clark's exclamation of "Oh, Joy!" while standing on the Oregon coast watching the Pacific waves crash on the shore line.

Highly recommended for those who enjoy American history.
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LibraryThing member PuddinTame
The text combines tales of the Lewis and Clark exploration with the Ambroses camping and hiking trips to the same spots. Ambrose also talks about accompanying Ken Burns and Dayton Duncan while they were filming their television documentary. I didn't always find the modern information terribly
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interesting, but I will be sure to look up the documentary.

I read this just after reading Ambrose's Undaunted Courage about the expedition. The text is of course much shorter, but seems to capture the expedition pretty well. In this book, Ambrose goes into a little more detail about the later lives of people other than Lewis & Clark.

The illustration is lavish. Sam Abell's gorgeous photographs are grouped at the end of the chapters, rather than integrated with the text. This can be a little annoying, but they are certainly wonderful shots. A number of other reproductions of artwork, artifacts and museums are worked into the text.
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LibraryThing member wesh
Lovely photographs. The text breaks no new ground, but is a useful companion for explaining the photographs.
LibraryThing member hslone1
Great book with an indepth look at what went on with Lewis and his "dark days." It's good that he asked Clark or the expedition might not have been so successful. Although this was historical fiction, Ambrose paints his picture with lots of facts. He makes you believe that he was there first
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person. I did not have a clue about the danger and hardship that these people experienced in making this trip before reading this book. Neither did I know about the lives of Lewis and Clark after their return. It is a sad thing to know about Lewis's last days.
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Pages

288

Rating

(28 ratings; 4.1)
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