In 1897, Swedish explorer Salomon August Andree devised a plan to conquer the North Pole that was equal parts brilliant and suicidal. He intended to fly over the deadly ice caps in a massive, unsteerable hydrogen balloon. Driven by fierce nationalistic pride and an unwavering belief in untested technology, Andree ignored every warning sign. He relied on a bizarre drag-rope steering invention that had never been successfully tested. Within hours of launching, the ropes failed, the balloon froze, and the three men crashed into the endless, unforgiving Arctic ice, disappearing for over thirty years. This book meticulously reconstructs the doomed expedition through the crew's recovered diaries. It explores the toxic intersection of scientific arrogance, public pressure, and the human refusal to abandon a failing plan. Discover the terrifying reality of survival in the harshest environment on Earth, and understand how unquestioned optimism led three men into an entirely preventable, frozen demise.