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The Solitude Of Thomas Cave: A Novel (2007)

The Solitude of Thomas Cave: A Novel (2007)

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Genre
Rating
3.63 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
1596912723 (ISBN13: 9781596912724)
Language
English
Publisher
bloomsbury usa

About book The Solitude Of Thomas Cave: A Novel (2007)

I've always enjoyed stories of Polar exploration, both fiction and non-fiction. I think it's because incredible journeys have been undertaken which put men under such duress, they all seem a bit surreal. The true stories are often more unbelievable than the fictitious ones.This story I loved. Told in a very precise and economical style, beautiful language and haunting imagery. Thomas Cave on a dare is left behind in the Far North to winter over on his own. He seems well equipped in all respects to survive the winter but he is a melancholic man and there are hints of a tragedy in his past. He is a strong but flawed man and there is intrigue there in terms of his past and his ability to deal with it in order to survive the winter.As the night descends on Cave, we are drawn into the psychological nightmare of the loneliness, the darkness and the mental strength required to survive. He hunts and comes into close contact with polar bears who seem to become a totem animal to him.The story also explores life after the ordeal and how Cave lived out his days totally colored by the Polar Night he experienced.It was engrossing and beautifully written.

Picked this up in the bargain bin in my local bookstore and was very pleasantly surprised. Capturing the eerie isolation and stark beauty of Caves wintry outpost, while adhering to a very traditional form of story-telling, this is beautifully told, a real winters night read.Thomas Cave takes on a wager to winter in a remote isolated shelter in the Arctic; his crewmates on the whaling ship the Heartsense, leave him, convinced that he will not survive the harsh, dark winter months and lonely isolation.Harding grips the reader throughout, and we soon learn that Cave has to battle more than freezing temperatures - he has demons of his own to confront, and this becomes the greater challenge.Harding doesn't flinch in describing the essential cruelty of life as a whaler,and long before this book ends, the reader senses that Cave has been forced to re-assess his way of life, and mans constant attempts to assert dominance over the natural world.This, above all things, is a proper story, beautifully told. A memorable read.

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This novel about survival in the far north & how it affects the rest of Thomas Cave's life is written quite gorgeously. Periodically it includes Thomas's journal entries--& these are no exception, which undercuts the author's occasional assertion that he is a man of action rather than words. If he did not wield words well, he wouldn't have the capacity for such deep & subtle thinking.Exploring the long-term effects of his prolonged experience of hyper-cold is a fascinating undertaking; I'm not sure this final half (or third) of the book works as well as the survival chapters, but good for Harding for trying.
—Ruth

First of all, don't read this expecting a descent into madness by any means. Harding did a great job mimicking the "classic" writing style (and by that I mean pre-Victorian), which made the tale seem more authentic in my eyes. And luckily it lacked the (in my opinion) annoying trait of pre-Victorian novels actually written back then where the author would extrapolate for page and page about the scenery. But at the end I felt cheated, as I wanted more suspense and psychological issues than the rather uninteresting ones he dealt with. The love story was realistic but, sadly, not overly romantic, which also was a let down. I don't think I'd read it again, but it was worth reading once.
—Tina

Either writers really like writing about the Northern sea, whaling, and surviving in the polar ice, or I have a prediliction for choosing the only ones out there. This is the story of a whaler who takes a bet that he cannot survive alone on a northern island (off of Greenland) throughout the winter. He is provided with a cabin, a gun, and enough stores from the ships for 5 men to survive. I suppose the focus was how does a person survive psychologically in the cold and dark for months on end. Indeed, he is haunted by his dead wife and son. I never really felt like surviving was a challenge for him, and I don't feel like he resolved anything concerning his feelings about his wife and son. The only thing he seemed to carry away from the experience is that man tried to have dominion over things that should be left alone, that they are cruel and wasteful, and that the only evil that exists is found in man. If you want to read about whaling, read Moby Dick. If you want to read about surviving in extreme conditions read Island of the Lost.
—Mitzi

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