A Grue of Ice

by Geoffrey Jenkins

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My hands were already at Walter's throat as he fought to get clear of his harness. I kicked his feet from under him as he fumbled. I was still held in the strait-jacket grip of the Hotchkiss harness. Walter fell, rolled, dragged himself on one elbow, pullin the Luger from his waistband. He raised the automatic to fire. 'Hurtles into a maelstrom of action and suspense' Sunday Times 'All the sustained excitement of a thriller in the boundless wastes of the Antarctic!' Illustrated London News show more 'Vivid and exciting.' Punch show less

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3 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 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 show more 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.
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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
Apr 23, 2025English (UK)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
A Grue of Ice
Original publication date
1962
Epigraph
I mind yet the cold grue of terror
I got it from....
JOHN BUCHAN: Prester John
First words
"Drake Passage"

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Suspense & Thriller
DDC/MDS
823Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction
LCC
PZ4 .J515 .GLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction in English
BISAC

Statistics

Members
110
Popularity
295,472
Reviews
2
Rating
½ (3.32)
Languages
Dutch, English, Finnish
Media
Paper, Audiobook
ISBNs
8
ASINs
5