Imagen del autor

William Battersby (1958–2016)

Autor de James Fitzjames: The Mystery Man of the Franklin Expedition

10 Obras 60 Miembros 2 Reseñas

Obras de William Battersby

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Battersby, William
Nombre legal
Battersby, Thomas William
Fecha de nacimiento
1958
Fecha de fallecimiento
2016-10-17
Género
male
Nacionalidad
UK
Lugar de fallecimiento
Cambridgeshire, UK
Lugares de residencia
London, England, UK
Ocupaciones
investment manager
archaeologist
pilot
author
Biografía breve
I'm a British national who divides my time between rural Hertfordshire and London. I studied Archaeology at the Institute of Archaeology, University of London (now part of University College, London) and graduated with First Class Honours. I am a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society. I work in finance and over the last few years have carried out a great deal of original research into several aspects of the Franklin Expedition. I'm also very interested in music and am a private pilot, flying a high performance Super Dimona motor-glider. I'm convinced that multi-disciplinary research which combines archaeology, a proper understanding of Inuit family memories and archival research can yield a far better understanding of the Franklin tragedy.

http://franklinexpedition.blogspot.co...

Miembros

Reseñas

Third in command of the Franklin Expedition, he was a Royal Naval hero at age 32. He had secrets though: the scandal of his birth, the source of his influence, and his plans for what to do after the famous expedition. The author strips away 200 years of misinformation to portray Fitzjames and his significance for Franklin's expedition. Battersby did his research thoroughly but in the end I did not find it very interesting.
 
Denunciada
VivienneR | otra reseña | Mar 26, 2021 |
James Fitzjames is a mystery despite inherited assumptions about him. And the tale of third in command on the Franklin expedition by William Battersby explores that mystery with exquisite detail and research. This is a remarkable book, especially for a first time book writer. It is again the kind of history I like to read: steeped in detail and direct quoting from primary sources, but never to the extent of weakening the narrative, the storytelling that drives non-academic scholarship. The sense of the love and passion for careful, comprehensive historical research emanates from every chapter. You can just imagine the number of dead ends Battersby traveled and ghosts chased before uncovering this untold and surprising tale. While the sense from Beardsley and Lambert is of writers wanting to "fix" a history they considered flawed, Battersby comes across more as an explorer, out to find out what he can about this intriguing figure and being driven on by each new revelation. Fitzjames is remade, the image of a well-to-do privileged and favoured son of the navy inappropriately added to the expedition in a leading role, convincingly re-cast as a bastard child with talents, a hard ride up the ranks and who held many secrets in his closet, of his own as well as, quite importantly, those belonging to important others.

As a first book, it is naturally not without its flaws, but the number of "new finds" from Battersby is really quite remarkable. At times, it is almost like a detective novel, uncovering hidden mystery after hidden mystery - his parentage, his “sister” and “brother”, the Euphrates expedition, the Chinese wars, the mysteriously and frequently occurring “X” in his journals... I'll leave the "reveal" to my reader's own readings, but it is enough to make my recommendation of this text strong, if being the only biography of Fitzjames wasn't enough to put this book on your reading list.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
TedBetts | otra reseña | Mar 3, 2011 |

Estadísticas

Obras
10
Miembros
60
Popularidad
#277,520
Valoración
4.0
Reseñas
2
ISBNs
12

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