The Expeditions of Zebulon Montgomery Pike, Volume 2 (of 3) by Pike and Coues

(7 User reviews)   493
By Hudson Rivera Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Interior Design
Coues, Elliott, 1842-1899 Coues, Elliott, 1842-1899
English
Hey, have you heard about Zebulon Pike? Not the mountain—the guy. I just finished the second volume of his expedition journals, and it's wild. Forget the neat maps in history books. This is the messy, real-time story of a young army officer leading a team into what was basically unknown territory in 1806. They're freezing, starving, and completely lost half the time, trying to follow rivers to their source. The main tension isn't with armies or monsters, but with the land itself and the sheer, brutal difficulty of just surviving. Pike's own words show his frustration, his determination, and his constant miscalculations. The editor, Elliott Coues, adds these fantastic notes that basically read like a historian whispering over your shoulder, pointing out where Pike was wrong or what he missed. It's less a polished adventure tale and more a raw, unfiltered survival log. If you like stories where the wilderness is the main character, and the 'hero' is just a stubborn guy trying not to die while drawing maps, you need to pick this up.
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Let's be clear: this isn't a novel. Volume 2 of Pike's Expeditions is a primary source, a journal. But that's what makes it so gripping. You're reading history as it happened, complete with the doubts, the dead ends, and the cold toes.

The Story

This volume picks up with Lieutenant Zebulon Pike and his small party in the dead of winter, 1806-1807. Their official goal is to explore the headwaters of the Arkansas and Red Rivers. The real story is a grueling fight against the Colorado Rockies. They are poorly equipped for the snow, constantly running low on food, and, as we learn, often hilariously (and dangerously) mistaken about where they are. Pike famously mistakes the towering peak that would later bear his name as a small hill they can climb in an afternoon. The journey becomes a desperate scramble for survival, involving building a makeshift stockade, encounters with Spanish authorities who aren't thrilled to find him there, and a long, arduous detention in New Mexico. The plot is the daily grind of exploration gone wrong.

Why You Should Read It

I love this book because it strips away the myth. Pike isn't a flawless explorer-hero; he's a 27-year-old in over his head, making tough calls with limited information. His voice is direct, sometimes boastful, sometimes admirably stoic. The real magic, though, is Elliott Coues's editing. Coues published this edition nearly 80 years later, and his footnotes are like a conversation across time. He corrects Pike's geography, adds context from other explorers, and points out the political subtext Pike couldn't write openly about. Reading Pike's original text alongside Coues's commentary feels like getting two books in one: the raw experience and the expert analysis.

Final Verdict

This is perfect for history buffs who want to get their hands dirty with primary sources, and for anyone who enjoys true adventure survival stories. If you loved the gritty details in books like Endurance or Into the Wild, you'll find a similar compelling tension here. It's not a light read—it's a detailed journal—but it offers an unmatched, boots-on-the-ground (or snowshoes-in-the-snow) look at the early American West. Be ready for a slow, immersive trek, not a quick-action thriller.



✅ Usage Rights

This digital edition is based on a public domain text. You are welcome to share this with anyone.

Joshua Garcia
3 months ago

Text is crisp, making it easy to focus.

Barbara Scott
5 months ago

Text is crisp, making it easy to focus.

5
5 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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