
                                               In 1757,  when twelve-year-old Samuel Hearne joined the Royal Navy as an apprentice to the famous fighting captain Samuel Hood,  he was embarking on a life of high adventure. This young sailor would become the first European to reach the Arctic coast of North America,  the author of a classic work of exploration literature,  & the man who inspired one of the greatest poems in the English language. Yet,  for over two centuries,  Hearne's place in history has been a subject of dispute. In ANCIENT MARINER,  Ken Mc Googan paints a vivid portrait of life in the eighteenth century,  from London through to the farthest reaches of North America. After serving as a midshipman during the Seven Years War,  Hearne joined the Hudson's Bay Company & was posted to the Arctic coast. From there he embarked on an overland quest for a fabled copper mine
- also hoping to discover the Northwest Passage. In his epic account,  A JOURNEY TO THE NORTHERN OCEAN,  Hearne described this trek,  marked by hardship,  near-starvation & culture shock. Joining forces with the legendary Dene leader Matonabbee,  & closely observing the people,  wildlife & terrain as he went,  Hearne travelled more than 3,  500 miles,  mostly on foot. His journey culminated in the infamous massacre at ' Bloody Falls' at the mouth of the Coppermine River
- an event,  Mc Googan suggests,  that changed him for ever. In a fascinating piece of literary detective work,  Mc Googan also determines that,  having returned to London to live out his final days,  Hearne met Samuel Taylor Coleridge & inspired the poet to write his classic poem,  THE RIME OF THE ANCIENT MARINER.                                             
