
Parameters
- 400 pages
- 14 hours of reading
More about the book
For the last decade, Gretel Ehrlich has been obsessed by an island, a terrain, a culture, and the treacherous beauty of a world that is defined by ice. In This Cold Heaven she combines the story of her travels with history and cultural anthropology to reveal a Greenland that few of us could otherwise imagine.Ehrlich unlocks the secrets of this severe land and those who live there; a hardy people who still travel by dogsled and kayak and prefer the mystical four months a year of endless darkness to the gentler summers without night. She discovers the twenty-three words the Inuit have for ice, befriends a polar bear hunter, and comes to agree with the great Danish-Inuit explorer Knud Rasmussen that “all true wisdom is only to be found far from the dwellings of man, in great solitudes.”This Cold Heaven is at once a thrilling adventure story and a meditation on the clarity of life at the extreme edge of the world.
Book purchase
This Cold Heaven: Seven Seasons in Greenland, Gretel Ehrlich
- Language
- Released
- 2003
- product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
- (Paperback)
Payment methods
We’re missing your review here.
- Title
- This Cold Heaven: Seven Seasons in Greenland
- Language
- English
- Authors
- Gretel Ehrlich
- Publisher
- Vintage
- Released
- 2003
- Format
- Paperback
- Pages
- 400
- ISBN10
- 0679758526
- ISBN13
- 9780679758525
- Series
- Tags
- Non-Fiction, Social Sciences, Historical Themes, Maps & Travel, True Stories, Biographies, Nature, Travel, Adventure, Autobiographies & Memoirs, Anthropology
- Rating
- 3.95 out of 5
- Description
- For the last decade, Gretel Ehrlich has been obsessed by an island, a terrain, a culture, and the treacherous beauty of a world that is defined by ice. In This Cold Heaven she combines the story of her travels with history and cultural anthropology to reveal a Greenland that few of us could otherwise imagine.Ehrlich unlocks the secrets of this severe land and those who live there; a hardy people who still travel by dogsled and kayak and prefer the mystical four months a year of endless darkness to the gentler summers without night. She discovers the twenty-three words the Inuit have for ice, befriends a polar bear hunter, and comes to agree with the great Danish-Inuit explorer Knud Rasmussen that “all true wisdom is only to be found far from the dwellings of man, in great solitudes.”This Cold Heaven is at once a thrilling adventure story and a meditation on the clarity of life at the extreme edge of the world.