A suffragist's guide to the Antarctic

Yi Shun Lai

Book - 2024

In 1914 England, eighteen-year-old American Clara lies about her age and citizenship to land a coveted spot on an Antarctic expedition, but when the crew is marooned on an ice floe, Clara's mission to advance the women's suffrage movement takes a back seat to survival.

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Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Atheneum Books for Young Readers [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Yi Shun Lai (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
326 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 12 and up.
ISBN
9781665937764
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Lai paints a brutal portrait of Antarctica's unforgiving landscape via the detailed journal entries of a white-cued 18-year-old from Pennsylvania who longs to prove that she is as capable as any man in this insightful 1914-set historical debut. Determined not to end up married to a controlling man like her mother, Clara Ketterling-Dunbar joins the suffragist movement in London. When WWI puts their fight on the back burner, Clara lies about her age, nationality, and past to impulsively enlist in an ill-fated, all-male expedition to Antarctica. After their ship sinks, leaving the crew of 28 stranded on ice floes, Clara resolves to show that she can do more for their survival efforts than sew and cut hair--even if it means making enemies. Alongside her keen observations, Clara provides historical and scientific introspection into how to survive not just in Antarctica, but as an independent woman in the early 20th century. Though her observations about men ("A man will fill any dead space, if only just to hear themselves talk out loud") are ironically similar to the female stereotypes addressed in the text that she hopes to disprove, Clara is a defiant and resilient heroine who immediately endears herself to both the reader and her motley crew. As tension mounts and survival becomes uncertain, Lai neatly underscores the courage it took--and still takes--to be a woman in a male-dominated world. Ages 12--up. (Feb.)

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Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 9 Up--Eighteen-year-old American suffragist Clara Ketterling-Dunbar is on the adventure of a lifetime on an Antarctic Expedition in 1914. As the only woman on a crew of 28 members of The Resolute, she has to work as hard or harder than the men to prove her place on board. The crew of the British ship believes her to be a 21-year-old Canadian (she pretends because British sentiment isn't favorable of America's lack of women's suffrage and wartime assistance), and her adventure changes into a challenge when The Resolute is crushed by ice and sunk in the sea. The expedition becomes a survival situation as the crew camp in tents, stranded on ice floes. Clara has had lots of adventure in her lifetime. Growing up in the early 1900s she had the opportunity to learn about the outdoors, riding, and hunting with her mother. She also has recently traveled overseas to fight with the Women's Social and Political Union in London. When World War I broke out, she signed up for an Antarctic trip, keeping a journal for readers to learn about her adventures. VERDICT A great historical adventure for young adults, told in journal entries. This book would appeal to readers looking for a strong female role model and would be a welcome libraries serving teens.--Nancy Hawkins

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A young suffragist writes a real-time log of her adventures in Antarctica. Lai takes Sir Ernest Shackleton's famous 1914 expedition to Antarctica and adds a twist: How would adding a woman to the crew have affected the story? In her version, 18-year-old white American girl Clara Ketterling-Dunbar claims to be 21 and Canadian, since the Brits aren't happy that America hasn't yet joined the Great War. As Clara begins her story, their ship, the Resolute, has sunk after being crushed by pack ice. The 28 stranded crew members need to work together harmoniously in order to have any chance of survival. With her heart still tied to the women's suffrage movement she fought for, Clara bristles at being asked to make biscuits and mend clothing. But while she abandoned her mother as well as her American and British pro-suffrage colleagues for falling short of her ideals, she can't abandon her crewmates. When one she refers to as the Villain attempts to rape her, Clara fights him off, badly injuring him and causing a rift in the party. And yet they must try to survive. As a character, Clara feels modern but not anachronistic; she's wrestling with social issues that continue to resonate today, and her strong voice propels readers through an adventure as compelling as Shackleton's own to a heartfelt, realistic conclusion. Polar exploration transforms a young woman in unexpected and interesting ways in this original, evocative tale. (maps, author's note) (Historical fiction. 12-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Antarctic Expedition Feared Lost! ANTARCTIC EXPEDITION FEARED LOST! Staff Editorial, London Daily Times 1 November 1914 Amidst the carnage of the Great War, another strike against hope: Sir Douglas Henderson's much-anticipated crossing of the Antarctic continent is presumed doomed, with all crew members assumed deceased. As there has been no communication from the expedition ship The Resolute since mid-October, one must assume the worst. The news from the expedition was already bleak, with colder-than-usual temperatures in the Antarctic spring setting the timeline back by weeks. The ship became locked in sea ice a mere hundred miles from their desired destination on the Antarctic continent. Then the oil for the engines that were meant to propel the expedition sledges across Sir Douglas's beloved "Blue Continent" was reported hopelessly frozen, rendering the sledges useless even if the crew could manage to make shore. Who knows what other bad luck has befallen the expedition since it last sent word? Among the missing crew is Canadian Clara Ketterling-Dunbar, the only woman on crew and first-ever woman on any polar expedition. This newspaper has found fact that she is a member of the Women's Social and Political Union, that group of dangerous suffragettes angling for a voice in what is rightfully a man's world! Sir Douglas would have been well advised to not overlook the old truism that women on board are bad luck to begin with. Excerpted from A Suffragist's Guide to the Antarctic by Yi Shun Lai All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.