The Birthday Boys

The Birthday Boys is a novel by Beryl Bainbridge. First published in 1991, this book tells the story of Captain Robert Scott's 1910-13 expedition to Antarctica.

The Birthday Boys
First edition
AuthorBeryl Bainbridge
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
GenreHistorical novel
PublisherGerald Duckworth and Company
Publication date
5 December 1991
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages200 pp
ISBN0-7156-2378-8
OCLC25110855

Plot introduction

Five first-person narratives give different perspectives on the voyage: Petty Officer Taff Evans; the ship's scholar, medic, and biologist Dr. Edward Wilson; Robert Falcon Scott; Lieutenant Henry Bowers; and Captain Lawrence Oates each give their account of the hardships, the problems, and finally the failure of their endeavour: Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen beats them to the South Pole by a month.

Major themes

Beryl Bainbridge's book unites many features which have come to be seen as typical of Postmodernism: The five tales differ greatly and it is clear that readers are expected to make up their own minds as to the extent of "truth" in historical accounts of the events.

Post-modernist literature often tries to subvert the assumption that there is a definite distinction between the imagined and the real. Traditionally, historiography is concerned with the domain of "truth" and "reality" and literature, on the other hand, deals with the "imaginative". The Birthday Boys blurs the borders between "fact" and "fiction".

gollark: Technically, yes.
gollark: Compared to what other times, mass extinctions?
gollark: There might be. No other ones with life are known, let alone earthlike life.
gollark: I mean, ~~it~~ temperature's been going up very fast and carbon dioxide also has, so not really.Also, there isn't oil in space, it's derived from biological processes ages ago on Earth.
gollark: [REDACTED]
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