Though you wouldn’t guess from the title, Martha Gellhorn’s The Wine of Astonishment is a war novel in which the lead character experiences such horrors as the Battle of the Bulge and Dachau. It originally appeared in 1948 with this Bantam edition and its James Avati cover art coming in 1949. Gellhorn was a towering literary and journalistic figure who reported from Civil War Spain, D-Day Normandy, and Vietnam, and who today has a prize named after her—The Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism. She also married Ernest Hemingway. The Wine of Astonishment isn’t something we’ll read, because we stopped with war literature a while back, but we may try one of her other books.
1911—Team Reaches South Pole
Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen, along with his team Olav Bjaaland, Helmer Hanssen, Sverre Hassel, and Oscar Wisting, becomes the first person to reach the South Pole. After a celebrated career, Amundsen eventually disappears in 1928 while returning from a search and rescue flight at the North Pole. His body is never found.