Thank you for visiting. Please check back soon. We're building a store where you will be able to download the riveting Armchair Adventurer stories that
Lawrence Howard has created and told.
If you are interested in learning more about
the history of Lawrence's work, please visit the
Body of Work which has a brief description of each story and
the chronological order it was researched and developed.
Looking for more details about Lawrence Howard? Visit this link to his
About page. Thank you!
Turning northward to the Arctic, Nansen of the North,
is the story of Fridtjof Nansen, the father of polar
travel, the one who showed them all how it could be done.
Nansen, who famously said, It is better to go skiing and to think
about God than it is to go to church and think about skiing.
Polar Opposites recounts heroic and tragic events in Antarctica when
Scott fought his way to the Pole only
to find the Norwegian flag flying there: Amundsen had beaten him by five weeks.
The true, epic tale of Ernest Shackleton and the British Imperial
Trans-Antarctic Expedition of 1914. Their valiant ship,
The Endurance, was trapped in the pack ice and crushed; Shackleton and his 28 men
survived on the ice for over a year and endured incredible hardships.
The Essex brings the unbelievable but true events behind the legendary
whale encounter to life. This is the true story that Melville later
used to create the tale of Moby Dick.
This amazing story of survival and courage that will move you to the depths of your soul.
Sledging in Antarctica, Douglas Mawson was thrown into peril when one of the sleds
was lost in a deep crevasse. Mawson struggled against freezing temperatures,
80 mile-per-hour winds, loneliness, grief, illness and starvation, pulling his one
remaining sled for hundreds of miles.
The Adventures of Huckleberry Howard is a trilogy of inter-connected coming of age tales about bullies, and brothers, and breaking away. This CD
includes three of Lawrence's most popular stories: In The Belly of The Beast, Night Blues, and Into The West,
with a little harmonica music and a few dirty limericks thrown in for good measure.