I think Andy Weir basically revived the Victorian adventure story genre. Robinson Crusoe is the most famous book in that genre.
But The Wager by David Granny a nonfiction book about a real life wreck and how the navy sailors survived off the coast of Patagonia.
In the Heart of the Sea by Nathaniel Philbrick is also non-fiction in the same vibe about a group of sailors lost in the Pacific after a whale sinks their ship.
The Terror by David Simmons is also another lost at sea book but fiction with a supernatural element set in the arctic based on a true story.
Alone: A Classic Polar Adventure by Robert Evelyn Bird is a first hand account of his failed attempt to survive alone over winter in Antarctica. It's absolutely harrowing.
I think Andy Weir basically revived the Victorian adventure story genre. Robinson Crusoe is the most famous book in that genre.
But The Wager by David Granny a nonfiction book about a real life wreck and how the navy sailors survived off the coast of Patagonia.
In the Heart of the Sea by Nathaniel Philbrick is also non-fiction in the same vibe about a group of sailors lost in the Pacific after a whale sinks their ship.
The Terror by David Simmons is also another lost at sea book but fiction with a supernatural element set in the arctic based on a true story.
Alone: A Classic Polar Adventure by Robert Evelyn Bird is a first hand account of his failed attempt to survive alone over winter in Antarctica. It's absolutely harrowing.