New York Times bestselling author Mark Synnott has free climbed with Alex Honnold. He's scaled Mt. Everest. But in 2022, he realized there was a dream he'd never conquered, never mind attempted-to sail the Northwest Passage in his own boat, a feat only 400 or so sailors had ever accomplished-and in doing so, try to solve the mystery of what happened to legendary 19th century explorer Sir John Franklin and his ship, the HMS Terror.New York Times bestselling author Mark Synnott has climbed with Alex Honnold. He's scaled Mount Everest. He's pioneered big-wall first ascents, including the north-west face of the mile-high Great Trango Tower, and skied monster first descents. But in 2022, he realized there was a dream he'd yet to achieve- to sail the Northwest Passage in his own boat-- a feat only four hundred or so sailors have ever accomplished-and in doing so, try to solve the mystery of what happened to legendary nineteenth-century explorer Sir John Franklin and his ships, HMS Erebus and Terror.Only a few hundred vessels have ever transited the Northwest Passage, and substantially fewer have done so in a fiberglass-hulled boat like Polar Sun. But Mark was determined to return to the Arctic, where he cut his teeth as a young climber, and in the process investigate one of the great mysteries of exploration- What really happened to Sir John Franklin and his entire 128-man crew, which disappeared into these ice-strewn waters 175 years ago?In this pulse-pounding travelogue, Mark Synnott paints a vivid portrait of the Arctic, which is currently warming twice as fast as any other part of our planet. He weaves its history and people into the first-person account of his epic journey through the Northwest Passage, searching for Franklin's tomb along the way-- all while trying to avoid a similar fate.In Into the Ice, Mark and his crew race against time and treacherous storms in search of answers to the greatest mystery of all time- What is it that drives someone to risk it all in the name of exploration?
βPart travelogue, part historical mystery and part memoir, βInto the Iceβ will appeal to fans of extreme adventure stories, nearly all of whom will never sail a boat through the Northwest Passage.β βAssociated Press
"Many people reassessed their lives during the Covid-19 pandemic. Mark Synnott, an accomplished mountaineer and writer, decided it was a good time to refit his sailboat, the Polar Sun, and navigate the Northwest Passageβthe icy arctic waterway that connects the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.... Mr. Synnottβs narrative often brings readers onto the boat with him, sluicing through the icy waters."βWall Street Journal
"You can fill a lot of shelves with books about Sir John Franklinβs doomed 1845 expeditionβ¦and whenever I see a new one I wonder: How will this be different? But Mark Synnottβs Into the Ice really is differentβas well as informative, refreshingly honest, and page-turning.β βSail Magazine
"This thrill ride of a voyage should please history buffs and armchair travelers alike.β βShelf Awareness
βWhat an adventure this book is! There are those who love dangerβthe more extreme the betterβand those whose idea of peril is taking the subway instead of an Uber. Both types will be enthralled by Mark Synnottβs book.β βAir Mail
"[A] swashbuckling tale." βConde Nast Traveler
βSynnott delivers a thrilling account of his 2022 journey through Canadaβs inhospitable Arctic islandsβ¦ while recapping heart-pounding encounters with blizzards, gales, polar bears, and an Arctic typhoonβall in a 47-foot fiberglass sailboat that could crack open like a walnut if caught in the iceβ¦a page-turner.β βPublishers Weekly (starred review)
"A breathtaking journey through the far north! Boats, bears, bros, and the belated investigation of a century-old history mysteryβ¦ What a book!" βDana Snitzky, history and current affairs reviews editor, PW Picks
"Good history and a compelling extreme adventure.β βKirkus
βPart historical detective story, part modern-day seafaring saga, Into the Ice paints an indelible portrait of the delicate yet perilous world of the Arctic. But Mark Synnott has also done something else. Out of gin-clear fjords, ice floes the size of Walmart Supercenters, and century-old Inuit tales of marooned British mariners, heβs crafted a moving parable on ambition, hubris, and the price of ignoring Indigenous voices in a beautiful yet haunted land.β βScott Ellsworth, bestselling author of The Ground Breaking
βAn extraordinary account of expedition sailing and painstaking historic detective work. Synnott writes with humility and grace born of deep experience in difficult situations. He's as tough as they come but this voyage, the harrowing and heroic story of piloting Polar Sun, a 47' fiberglass sailboat, through the Northwest Passage will leave you shivering and awestruck. Synnott and crew display a raw tenacity that rivals the early explorers they retrace, pressing on as the forbidding Arctic throws all it has at them. You will have to read the book to see if Synnott finds the lost tomb of Sir John Franklin, but there's no doubt he rediscovers his spirit. Into the Ice will join the ranks of classic arctic literature, it's a hell of a read.β βJohn Kretschmer, author of Sailing to the Edge of Time
"Weaving together maritime history, Inuit oral traditions, and modern climate science, Mark Synnott crafts a gripping tale of human ambition and folly in one of Earth's most unforgiving environments. Into the Ice is both a thrilling modern adventure and a haunting meditation on how the Arctic shapes the destinies of those drawn to its icy waters, just as it did tragically nearly two centuries ago." βNeil Shubin, author of the national bestseller Your Inner Fish and Ends of the Earth
"A reaffirmation that the spirit of exploration is thriving in the 21st Century. Into the Ice is a meeting of history, adventure and whodunnit that extends the thread of Arctic exploration from the first European expeditions to the present day, revealing how much has evolved over the centuries and how much remains unchanged." βFelicity Aston, explorer and author of Polar Exposure
Mark Synnott is a twenty-eight-year member of the North Face Global Athlete Team, an internationally certified mountain guide, and a trainer for the Pararescuemen of the United States Air Force. A regular contributor to National Geographic magazine, he is the author of New York Times bestseller The Impossible Climb and The Third Pole. When not living on Polar Sun, Mark and his family reside in the Mt. Washington Valley of New Hampshire.
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