Polar Explorers discussion

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The Terror
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The Terror by Dan Simmons
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Janie
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Nov 04, 2015 01:37PM

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I found it easier to enjoy when I started pretending this wasn't about the actual Franklin expedition, and just a tragedy that happened to resemble it.
(It's been about a year, but I read the Terror via audiobook courtesy of the library and I do recommend it. The reader--Simon Vance?--has a satisfying grasp on UK accents and that, at least, soothed a lot of my irritation regarding supernatural plot twists.)


Spoilers ahoy, I suppose!
The supernatural element would have been improved, I felt, if we never gotten a solid description of the Tuunbaq. In retrospect, I know what Simmons was trying to describe, but my initial mental image was so absurd that it the scenes involving said Tuunbaq became more comedy than nightmare fuel in the end. That was my major complaint, I think (and to be fair, one that I have with most stories/films that deal with monsters).
As much as I disliked how Simmons handled the supernatural aspects of his story, I did enjoy the final chapter where Crozier must say goodbye to his ship. That was very poignant and certain parts, to this day, I still try not to think about late at night or I spook myself.
I'm not a huge fan of historical fiction in general because the vast majority feels so anachronistic, so I was immediately biased against the Terror... but I can say, for the most part, I enjoyed this book more than I disliked it.

I understand, and have had the same feeling with numerous books. A part of me wants to sympathize. Another part of me wants to say, read the rest of the book! It's so good! Ha! Did you make it to the Masque of the Red Death scene?

Here there be spoilers...
I thought of Tuunbaq(thank you for the name!) as a huge polar bear, I guess. He scared the crap out of me. Especially the scene where he's chasing the man through the masts of the ship.
It's been a while since I read this and I know there were parts that I found more comical than frightening. I just kept reading. The good outweighed the bad, by far.
I agree about Crozier, he was an incredible character. Goodsir too. I think I cried a couple of times at the end of this book. I'm not proud. :)

The Tuunbaq unsettled me at first. I knew Simmons meant to describe a polar bear but somehow my inner eye short-circuited and the "triangular head" description made me think of a preying mantis instead. Then for the rest of the book I was stuck imagining a giant preying mantis scuttling over the ice... which was unbearably funny at times.
I'm currently borrowing a copy of Simmon's Abominable, so we'll see if his approach to writing monsters has changed...
