Australia Twice Traversed by Ernest Giles
Ernest Giles wasn't an armchair traveler. In the 1870s, he mounted five major expeditions into the heart of Australia, trying to find a route from the settled south to the northern coast. Australia Twice Traversed is his own account of two of those epic, punishing journeys. He took a handful of men, a bunch of camels, and a mountain of grit into a landscape that was, at the time, a literal blank on the map.
The Story
Think of it as a real-time diary of struggle. The plot is simple: go west, find water, don't die. Giles describes pushing through the Gibson and Great Victoria Deserts. He names mountains and salt lakes, but the real drama is in the daily slog. They dig for water in dry creek beds. They shoot their own camels for food when rations run out. The tension comes from watching their margin for error shrink to nothing. One journey ends in tragic failure with the death of a companion, Gibson, for whom the desert is named. The other is a hard-won success, a brutal crossing that proved it could be done, but at a tremendous cost.
Why You Should Read It
You read this for the raw, unfiltered voice. Giles is witty, stubborn, and sometimes downright unlikeable, but he's always real. His descriptions of the 'ghastly, waterless, and forbidding' interior are stunning in their stark honesty. This isn't a romantic adventure; it's a story of obsession. You get a front-row seat to the moment where European ambition smashed into ancient, indifferent geography. It makes you feel the weight of a canteen, the panic of a dry well, and the sheer audacity of trying to conquer a continent with little more than hope and a compass.
Final Verdict
Perfect for readers who love true survival stories, armchair adventurers, and anyone fascinated by the messy, human side of exploration history. If you enjoyed the grit of Endurance or Into the Wild, you'll find a similar spirit here, but with a 19th-century twist. It's not a fast-paced novel; it's a slow-burn chronicle of exhaustion and determination. Be prepared to feel thirsty.
This is a copyright-free edition. It is available for public use and education.
Charles Young
1 year agoThanks for the recommendation.
Nancy Clark
7 months agoThis is one of those stories where the arguments are well-supported by credible references. A true masterpiece.
Betty Clark
6 months agoHaving read this twice, the atmosphere created is totally immersive. Absolutely essential reading.