Farthest North, Vol. I is Fridtjof Nansen’s first-hand account of his daring 1893–1896 expedition aboard the ship Fram, deliberately frozen into the Arctic ice to drift toward the North Pole. Nansen narrates the planning, the voyage, and the long polar winter with scientific precision and vivid descriptive power.
Beyond its drama, the book is a serious record of Arctic exploration, ethnography, and natural observation, attentive to ice, weather, wildlife, and the peoples of the far north. Nansen later became a renowned scientist, statesman, and humanitarian, and this volume captures the spirit of bold inquiry that defined the heroic age of polar exploration. It remains a classic of travel and discovery literature.