"Vance, Simon" . . . . "Shipwrecks Fiction." . . "Arctic regions" . . "Sea monsters Fiction." . . "Simmons, Dan" . . "Northwest Passage Discovery and exploration British Fiction." . . "Books on CD." . . "Survival Fiction." . . "Survival after airplane accidents, shipwrecks, etc. Fiction." . . . . . . "The terror a novel" . . . . . "The Terror" . . . . . . "The terror"@en . "The terror" . . "Fiction"@en . "Fiction" . . . . . . "Sea stories" . "Sea stories"@en . . . . . . . "Horror tales" . . "Their captain's insane vision of a Northwest Passage has kept the crewmen of HMS Terror trapped in Arctic ice for two years without a thaw. But the real threat to their survival isn't the ever-shifting landscape of white, the provisions that have turned to poison, or the ship slowly buckling in the grip of the frozen ocean. The real threat is whatever is out in the frigid darkness, stalking their ship, snatching and brutally killing their fellow seamen. Captain Crozier, who has taken over the expedition after the death of its original leader, Sir John Franklin, draws equally on his strengths as a mariner and on the mystical beliefs of the Eskimo woman he's rescued as he sets a course on foot out of the Arctic and away from the insatiable beast. But every day the dwindling crew becomes more deranged and mutinous, until even Crozier begins to fear there may be no escape from an ever-more-inconceivable nightmare."@en . . . "Their captain's insane vision of a Northwest Passage has kept the crewmen of \"The terror\" trapped in Arctic ice for two years without a thaw. But the real threat to their survival isn't the ever-shifting landscape of white, the provisions that have turned to poison before they open them, or the ship slowly buckling in the grip of the frozen ocean. The real threat is whatever is out in the frigid darkness, stalking their ship, snatching one seaman at a time or whole crews, leaving bodies mangled horribly or missing forever. Captain Crozier takes over the expedition after the creature kills its original leader, Sir John Franklin. Drawing equally on his own strengths as a seaman and the mystical beliefs of the Eskimo woman he's rescued, Crozier sets a course on foot out of the Arctic and away from the insatiable beast. But every day the dwindling crew becomes more deranged and mutinous, until Crozier begins to fear there is no escape from an ever-more-inconceivable nightmare."@en . . . . . "In an attempt to find a northwest passage to the Pacific, 129 men board two ships departed for the Arctic Circle. With the odds stacked against them, they must fight to survive the brutal conditions."@en . "In an attempt to find a northwest passage to the Pacific, 129 men board two ships departed for the Arctic Circle. With the odds stacked against them, they must fight to survive the brutal conditions." . . "Horror fiction"@en . "Horror fiction" . "The terror [a novel]"@en . . . "Audiobooks"@en . "Audiobooks" . . "A story of the 1840s Franklin expedition and its doomed search for the Northwest Passage. Some of the men perish from the cold or poisoned food, and madness after being shipwrecked for two years, while others are killed by a monstrous creature."@en . . "Sound recordings"@en . . . . . . "Sea stories, American." . .