Picture of author.

Geoffrey Jenkins (1920–2001)

Author of Scend of the Sea

27+ Works 958 Members 3 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the name: Geoffrey Jenkins

Works by Geoffrey Jenkins

Scend of the Sea (1971) 116 copies
A Grue of Ice (1962) 111 copies, 2 reviews
A Twist of Sand (1959) 100 copies
The River of Diamonds (1964) 83 copies
Hunter-Killer (1967) 80 copies
A Cleft of Stars (1973) 63 copies
A Ravel of Waters (1981) 62 copies
Southtrap (1979) 62 copies
The Watering Place of Good Peace (1960) 54 copies, 1 review
Fireprint (1984) 52 copies
A Bridge of Magpies (1974) 52 copies
The Unripe Gold (1983) 34 copies
In Harm's Way (1986) 30 copies
Hold Down a Shadow (1989) 25 copies
A Hive of Dead Men (1991) 12 copies

Associated Works

The Apocryphal Acts of John (1996) — Contributor — 5 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Jenkins, Geoffrey
Birthdate
1920-06-16
Date of death
2001-11-07
Gender
male
Occupations
journalist
Relationships
Palmer, Eve (wife)
Nationality
South Africa
Birthplace
Port Elizabeth, South Africa
Places of residence
Pretoria, South Africa
London, England, UK
Rhodesia
Associated Place (for map)
South Africa

Members

Reviews

6 reviews
Bruce Wetherby, a WW2 vet and environmental scientist, comes from a long line of explorers. For generations, the Wetherbys have owned a map that purports to show the location of the legendary Thompson Island in Antarctica—an island that can drive men mad in their quest to find it. Wetherby and his right-hand man, Sailhardy, fall into the clutches of one such man, Frederick Upton. Upton’s monomania is such that even his own daughter has been co-opted into his schemes. Will they all get show more out of Antarctica alive, and will Upton’s scheme be foiled?

I read this book on the strength of an automatic LibraryThing recommendation (I’d shelved Hunter-Killer by the same author). The edition I saw had a floatplane on the cover, and I was excited to read about floatplanes. Unfortunately, there was not enough floatplane for my liking. I did like that Upton’s daughter, Helen, was an extremely proficient helicopter pilot, though.

Overall, this was an uneven book. I liked Wetherby’s narrative voice, and I did find the struggle between him and the bad guys interesting (not to mention simply the challenges of being in the Antarctic), but the tone shifted wildly whenever Upton started talking. It was like he had wandered in from another book. He was so melodramatic that I expected to see bite marks in the corners of the pages from where he was chewing on the scenery. He was tiresome.

What was NOT tiresome, though, was the totally adorable baby seal that made an appearance toward the end. I nearly squealed out loud on the bus at that part. SOOOO CUTE.

So yes, I can’t say I really recommend this book, unless you have a high tolerance for melodramatic villains.
show less
Good old-fashined adventure. The events just before the end were stretching the possibilities a bit too much, otherwise quite enjoyable.
½
I love the Southern Ocean so I was curious about this book. Unfortunately I struggled to get into it and mostly found it to be pretty dull. The characters were pretty flat and I didn't love the writing style but I know others would have a better time with it.
½

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
27
Also by
1
Members
958
Popularity
#26,894
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
3
ISBNs
114
Languages
3
Favorited
2

Charts & Graphs