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A Captive in the Land (novel)

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Country
  
Australia

Publication date
  
1962

Pages
  
376 pp

Author
  
Preceded by
  
Language
  
Media type
  
Print

Originally published
  
1962

Genre
  
Fiction

Publisher
  
Hamish Hamilton, London

People also search for
  
The statesman's game, The Sea Eagle

A Captive in the Land (1962) is a novel by Australian writer James Aldridge.

Contents

Story outline

While undertaking a meteorological survey of the Arctic the crew of a Dakota aircraft observe a wrecked plane on the ice with one person moving around the area. With the Dakota unable to land Rupert Royce volunteers to parachute down to the wreckage to offer assistance. He succeeds but soon learns that the Dakota itself has crashed on returning to base with the loss of all the crew. Royce and the survivor spend the winter in the fuselage of the plane and then Royce decides to seek help by trekking 20 miles across the Arctic ice. He succeeds and is invited to Moscow to receive a medal for his deeds. As he is about to leave British intelligence requests he undertake some espionage activities during his travels in Russia.

Critical reception

A reviewer in The Canberra Times was very impressed with the first 100 pages of the novel, but found problems after that: "In recounting this journey Aldridge is brilliant and convincing. Like the doyens of all adventure books he has an incredible eye for detailed realism. After this, Mr. Aldridge goes on far too long."

Film adaptation

The novel was adapted for the screen in 1990. The adaptation was directed by John Berry from a script by John Berry and Lee Gold. It featured Sam Waterston, Aleksandr Potapov and Keir Giles.

References

A Captive in the Land (novel) Wikipedia


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