Mrs. Chippy's Last Expedition: The Remarkable Journal of Shackleton's Polar-Bound Cat
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Average customer review:Product Description
With an introduction by Lord Mouser-Hunt, this is the journal of Mrs Chippy, the cat who accompanied the carpenter Harry "Chippy" McNeish on the Shackleton's "Endurance" expedition in 1914.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #289973 in Books
- Published on: 1998-10-22
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 192 pages
Customer Reviews
Remember Mrs. Chippy
... this book does not pretend any falsehoods. It is a fictionalized account, of course, but is based on the accounts and journals of ALL of the crew, not just the famous or the high ranking. The true hardships are recounted in the footnotes, most notably excerpts from the diary of Henry McNish, Chippy's owner, bunk mate and ship's carpenter.
In a way Mrs. Chippy's account, built from references of all the other journals, speaks for those also marginalized and also only known through footnotes. McNish spent 28 hours toiling in waist deep frigid water to build a coffer dam in an attempt to hold back the water in the beginning of the end for the Endurance. Do we remember his name? Perce Blackborow, young and desperate for adventure, stowed away and worked hard as ships steward, assisted and filled in for the cook when he fell injured. Do we remember his name? Louis Rickinson and A.J. Kerr, ships engineers, worked at the boilers below decks, even as the ice pressing the hull made all manner of horrible and terrifying noises. Do we remember their names? Through Mrs. Chippy's eyes we catch a glimpse of all the crew, in their bravery and their humanity.
Lastly, any who would question the character or depth of relationship between even the hardened explorer and the ships cat, consider the following: Commander Frank Worsley, the Captain of the Endurance, chose the photo of Chippy and Blackborow that adorns the cover of this book as one of the few he published. ALL the diaries of the members of the expedition had descriptions of Chippy. Let me close with this quote from the poet Christopher Smart from his ode to his cat, Jeoffry: For he keeps the Lord's watch in the night against the adversary. For he counteracts the powers of darkness by his electrical skin and glaring eyes. For he counteracts the Devil, who is death, by brisking about the life.
We are shielded from Chippys final fate, the journal ends on October 29th. Chippy perished the next afternoon. Remember Chippy, and remember all those whose story is recorded in footnotes.
A Wonderful Catty Tail
I have a cat, who is called Mrs Chippy on account of the rather excellent four-legged polar explorer.
I love this book, which I read in almost in one sitting, as it detailed the adventures of Mrs Chippy over the period of a year. The characters, not only of Mrs Chippy and his mate, but of all on board the Endurance at the start of that fateful expedition are all brought lividly to life. You can almost breath the freezing Antartic air! Read this book, enjoy the sights and smells and the sounds that Mrs Chippy reports. This is a brilliant book.
Brave cat for brave men
A fellow cat-lover friend of mine gave me this book and I was truly hooked. If it weren't for the pictures and drawings, I would have continued to think it were a work of fiction: a cat on an expedition to Antarctica!!! Impossible!
C.Alexander's writing-style (from the P.O.V. of a cat) is a master-piece: she is a truly empathetic observer of cats and men and their inner mental workings. But what started out as a cute story about a cat and his crew, instead turned me on to read the "real" story as she has written in "The Endurance". I agree with the other reviewer in that you get to the end left hanging... but all the better to make you want to get your hands on her other book.
I was someone who would never have read an explorer's story ever, but this book worked its charm and has made me a convert to that noble genre.




