Antarctica's legend as a fascinating, forbidding place is confirmed and expanded in these insider articles. Covering everything from "Happy Camper School" to washing dishes to what it's like to fall in love in a place where the sun never goes down (or never comes up), these articles limn a world of colorful characters (human and otherwise) and breathtaking backdrops. The humor runs high here in work by Karen Joyce, who recounts an odd afternoon when it "rained chickens," and Glenn Grant, who riffs on the dreaded "psych test." Some of the contributors are award-winning travel writers: Bill Fox, for example, leads a pithy tour through the remote base McMurdo, while Lucy Bledsoe tells of looking for krill and finding dinosaur bones instead. Other contributors are newbies who vividly conjure the region's extraordinary sights, from gale-force winds and magnificent glaciers to mummified seals and charming penguins.
As an engineer who has worked in Antarctica many times and wintered over three times, I find this book rings very true. The incidents and places are authentic, as are the characters, including the slightly oddball characters who are attracted to a professsional "Life on the Ice". You won't get a complete view of Antarctica from this book, but you will read some delightful vignettes which illuminate life in this modern day other-worldly place. The final essay by Guy Gutheridge is especially good: here is the view of a man who has had more to do than any other with what has been written about Antarctica in the last four decades.
If you want to know what it feels like to live and work in Antarctica, READ THIS BOOK!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
I lived and worked in McMurdo Station, Antarctica, for a few seasons. Reading the Traveler's Tales chosen by Fox-Rogers was mesmerizing. She chose a set of amazing stories that both entertain and educate. If you want an authenic taste of "life on the Ice"...read this book.
It's a lively armchair read perfect for any general-interest library strong on adventure travel.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
What's it like to live and work in Antarctica? The next best thing to going there is the collection Antarctica: Life on the Ice, which explores the challenges of living in Antarctica. Essays from some twenty writers offer insights into challenges, ironies, and even funny tales of life in the region, contributed by those who chose to live and work there. It's a lively armchair read perfect for any general-interest library strong on adventure travel. Diane C. Donovan California Bookwatch
TERRIFIC ICE STORIES
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
This is an excellent anthology of essays about life on the Ice...chickens raining on McMurdo was laugh-out-loud hilarious and the story of the guy lost in a whiteout (and while in town, no less) was gripping. This is a great book for those who dream of being more than a tourist in Antarctica but aren't either scientists on a grant or writers/artists who the NSF will accept into their program, which is how most of these books get written. If I were young and strong and determined enough to get there by taking a scut job with Raytheon I would write one of these myself.
Amazing book
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
I just finished reading this collection, and it's incredible. The stories range from the hilarious to the melancholy to the deeply moving. All set in a landscape almost impossible to imagine, the tales bring to life the vast desert of the Antarctic and make the reader feel as if she's been there -- not only because of the vividness of the setting, but also because of the vividness of the emotions evoked by the setting. I'll admit, I'm no adventurer, but this book makes me want to visit the Antarctic. Really worth the read.
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