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The Future of Ice: A Journey into Cold by Gretel Ehrlich — book cover

The Future of Ice: A Journey into Cold

by Gretel Ehrlich
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Overview

This book was written out of Gretel Ehrlich’s love for winter–for remote and cold places, for the ways winter frees our imagination and invigorates our feet, mind, and soul–and also out of the fear that our “democracy of gratification” has irreparably altered the climate.

Over the course of a year, Ehrlich experiences firsthand the myriad expressions of cold, giving us marvelous histories of wind, water, snow, and ice, of ocean currents and weather cycles. From Tierra del Fuego in the south to Spitsbergen, east of Greenland, at the very top of the world, she explores how our very consciousness is animated and enlivened by the archaic rhythms and erupting oscillations of weather. We share Ehrlich’s experience of the thrills of cold, but also her questions: What will happen to us if we are “deseasoned”? If winter ends, will we survive?

Synopsis

To understand the complex, primal nature of cold, Ehrlich traveled to extreme points, from Tierra del Fuego to the Arctic circle. In this volume she reports on her experiences of the many expressions of cold--wind, water, snow and ice--and describes the history of these elements and of ocean currents and weather cycles. She attempts to uncover through her experiences the quintessential connection between humans and the physical world. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

Publishers Weekly

In this lyrical meditation on deep cold and its potential demise through global warming, Ehrlich (The Solace of Open Spaces; This Cold Heaven) backpacks among the glaciers of the southern Andes, winters in a Wyoming cabin and sails with the research ship Noorderlicht to the Greenland ice pack. Her prose is as sharply observed as poetry and nearly as compressed, and her narrative favors short scenes as fragmented as the breaking ice sheets she encounters. Though it occasionally dips into underpowered assertion ("We're spoiled because we've been living in an interglacial paradise for twenty thousand years"), it often soars to the sublime ("We are made of weather and our thoughts stream from the braid work of stillness and storms"). Ehrlich includes plenty of facts (the area covered by glaciers has diminished by 75% since 1850; increased meltwater from Greenland may actually make Europe colder), but her book is less about science than about sensation: loneliness and the relentless circling of the snowed-in mind; the rumbling of a glacier as its azure ice crumbles away; the whistling, ululating calls of the bearded seal. It does not lay out the workings of global warming nor attempt to provide blueprints for how to rescue what we are losing. It stands, instead, as a passionate elegy to what is melting away. Agent, Liz Darhansoff at Darhansoff, Verrill & Feldman. (Nov.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, Gretel Ehrlich

Gretel Ehrlich is the author of This Cold Heaven and The Solace of Open Spaces, among other works of nonfiction, fiction, and poetry. She divides her time between California and Wyoming.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

In this lyrical meditation on deep cold and its potential demise through global warming, Ehrlich (The Solace of Open Spaces; This Cold Heaven) backpacks among the glaciers of the southern Andes, winters in a Wyoming cabin and sails with the research ship Noorderlicht to the Greenland ice pack. Her prose is as sharply observed as poetry and nearly as compressed, and her narrative favors short scenes as fragmented as the breaking ice sheets she encounters. Though it occasionally dips into underpowered assertion ("We're spoiled because we've been living in an interglacial paradise for twenty thousand years"), it often soars to the sublime ("We are made of weather and our thoughts stream from the braid work of stillness and storms"). Ehrlich includes plenty of facts (the area covered by glaciers has diminished by 75% since 1850; increased meltwater from Greenland may actually make Europe colder), but her book is less about science than about sensation: loneliness and the relentless circling of the snowed-in mind; the rumbling of a glacier as its azure ice crumbles away; the whistling, ululating calls of the bearded seal. It does not lay out the workings of global warming nor attempt to provide blueprints for how to rescue what we are losing. It stands, instead, as a passionate elegy to what is melting away. Agent, Liz Darhansoff at Darhansoff, Verrill & Feldman. (Nov.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Readers of Ehrlich's chronicles of Greenland (This Cold Heaven) are already aware of her penchant for living on the edge of comfort. In this new book, they find her hiking through blizzards in the mountains of Tierra del Fuego; writing, huddled in a tent in subzero temperatures; and battling seasickness on a tumultuous ride through the wild and frigid North Atlantic sea. The author was following winter from one end of the globe to the other, searching for the effects of climate change on life. Ehrlich concludes, convincingly, that the future of ice is the future of life-the melting icecaps are causing a catastrophic disruption of ancient cycles, which in turn has a ripple effect throughout the natural and physical world. While exhibiting a naturalist's understanding of science, Ehrlich writes with a poet's gift for words. In her somewhat stream-of-consciousness style, she jumps between fact and rumination, observation and metaphor. Like Annie Dillard, Ehrlich is sometimes cryptic but always lyrical. Notes on her sources and references to further resources on global warming are included. Highly recommended for most environmental collections. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 7/04; for a Q&A with Ehrlich, see p. 84.-Ed.]-Maureen J. Delaney-Lehman, Lake Superior State Univ. Lib., Sault Ste. Marie, MI Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Praise-singing alarum depicting cold environments as under attack by greed-fed malfeasance. An editor tracks down Ehrlich (This Cold Heaven, 2001, etc.), who's living in a snow-bound tent in Wyoming and has logged time in other chilly venues, to ask whether she will write a book about winter, climate change, and the prospect of de-seasoning. The author bites: "What is the future of winter, of snow, of ice?" She already knows something is amiss, namely a human-fueled acceleration of global warming and general habitat degradation. (Pick a habitat, any habitat.) Glaciers are on the run, ice caps are melting, greenhouse gases are increasing, poisons are trapped in the snow, and Ehrlich tenders lucid slices of scientists' thoughts on the factors behind this loss of cold on earth. But true to her innate weather consciousness ("weather streamed into my nose, mouth, eyes, ears, and circulated in my brain"), she also seeks to express the vital biological and spiritual connections between cold and planetary health. These will be revealed in fleet impressions of her experiences while traveling in Tierra del Fuego, to the great islands of the Russian Far North. The impressions are personal, sometimes crystalline and sometimes oblique (winter is "the season we dive through the Big Dipper's cup to the other side of the constellations; we go behind the scenes of our own lives"), though also communicative of cold's fine urgency, a danger that can drive beauty to the bone, create brilliant cultures (not to mention colors), or nurture a fine menagerie, like the bumblebee "looking like a piece of fire" that flies into the maw of a snow squall. Ehrlich urges us "to be driven into action by the wild beautyand difficulty of a place," action to defend and action as the act of living. Agent: Liz Darhansoff/Darhansoff, Verrill and Feldman

Book Details

Published
November 1, 2005
Publisher
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Pages
224
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781400034352

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