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This Cold Heaven: Seven Seasons in Greenland [Paperback]

Gretel Ehrlich
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

3 Feb 2003

In an unforgettable tribute to the far latitudes, Gretel Ehrlich travels across Greenland, the largest island on earth.

Greenland is the largest island on earth. All but five percent of it is covered by a vast ice sheet, an enduring remnant of the last ice age. Despite a uniquely hostile environment, it has been inhabited continuously for thousands of years.

Greenlanders retain many of their traditional practices. Some still hunt on sleds made from whale and caribou with packs of dogs; others fashion harpoons from Narwhal tusks; entranced shamans make soul fights under the ice. The modern population lives on the edge of a stone- and ice-age world and has reached a unique understanding of it.

Ehrlich mixes stories of European anthropologists who have recorded the ways of the Inuit, with artists who have lived briefly on Greenland’s fringe in order to try to capture its extraordinary pure light. She travels across this unearthly landscape in the company of men and women who have a deep bond with it, and with them she discovers the realm of the Great Dark, ice pavilions, polar bears and Eskimo nomads. She learns about hunting and endurance, inuit languages, legends and ghosts. Conjuring up Greenland’s cruel, beautiful landscape, she shows that it is a land endowed with magical and mysterious properties. St Brendan, the sixth century Irish monk, described one of its huge glaciers as ‘a floating crystal castle the colour of a silver veil, yet hard as marble and the sea around it as smooth as glass and white as milk.’ It has lost none of its power to enthral.



Product details

  • Paperback: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Fourth Estate; New edition edition (3 Feb 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1841157236
  • ISBN-13: 978-1841157238
  • Product Dimensions: 19.2 x 12.8 x 3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 145,815 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

'A passionately written account…It could well be one of the last portraits of a land and a way of life that is about to be lost forever.' The Times

'Beautifully written…her book is a celebration of place and people that makes almost nostalgic reading as the planet warms, icebergs melt and the Inuit – and seals and polar bears – wonder how long their way of life will last.’ Financial Times

‘A lyrical but marvellously unsentimental account.’ John Burnside

‘Her enthusiasm is infectious and her indomitable determination to make a record of a culture under threat is admirable.’ Evening Standard

From the Back Cover

"A hymn to the Inuit people's rootedness in a landscape and tradition; and a threnody to what we in the developed world have lost. It is a well-worn theme, but Ehrlich here makes it her own."
SARAH WHEELER,'TLS'

Greenland is the largest island on earth, and all but five percent of it is covered by a vast ice sheet, an enduring remnant of the last ice age. Gretel Ehrlich travels across this unearthly landscape in the company of indigenous Greenlanders who, miraculously, have lived for thousands of years in this uniquely hostile environment. A poetic meditation on the gift of life, 'This Cold Heaven' is also an unforgettable and timeless tribute to the far latitudes, the realm of the great dark, of ice pavilions, polar bears and Eskimo nomads.

"A lyrical but marvellously unsentimental account…All the characters in 'This Cold Heaven', including Ehrlich herself, strive to live, not brokenly, not weakly, but appreciating the sun's gift of life."
JOHN BURNSIDE, 'Scotsman'

"Ehrlich's enthusiasm is infectious and her indomitable determination to make a record of a culture under threat is admirable. Who would not wish to listen to the groaning of the ice moving against ice, 'to be alive and on a dogsled in Greenland'?"
KATE CHISOLM, 'Evening Standard'


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Customer Reviews

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4.3 out of 5 stars
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Not a travel book, a book about obsession 17 Dec 2003
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Most people understand implicitly why someone may love Italy,or France, or India, say.But someone who goes to Greenland, not just once but again and again and again, not because they have to but because they want to , is a much rarer commodity. Gretel Ehrlich is such a person.And in her criss-crossings of Greenland, in all weathers-usually cold!-she meets other such people.Danes who are disenchanted with the rat-race and want a cleaner, purer environment for themselves and their children. A Japanese who came thirty or so years ago and just didn't want to leave. What is so compelling ? The strangeness and near-pristine nature of the landscape itself. The nature of the Inuit lifestyle, basic at times, but bound up with nature , very rich in stories, very authentic. And to be in a place where, even now, watches and clocks don't matter very much and where television is an occasional and rather surreal experience. Ehrlich weaves a spell with her writing-alternately lyrical and prosaic. Maybe in the end she doesn't even know herself quite why she keeps going back. . .she just does.Greenland speaks to some inner need.

I'd give this 5 stars were it not for the over-lengthy text, which could have done with some editing without ruining the flavour.

A particularly attractive feature is the way Ehrlich intersperses her own experiences of Greenland with those of Knud Rasmussen, who travelled to Greenland in the Twenties and whose ethnological research into the Inuit lifestyle has stood the test of time.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars An Interesting Read 6 Nov 2003
Format:Paperback
Having never heard of Gretel Ehrlich I came to this book without any idea of the author's past experiences. The book is incredibly intense. The first half of the book is more difficult to read that the second half. The author alludes to personal trauma and a need to confront her own fears but does so in a disjointed style. Her musing about the effects of total darkness and the climate made me wonder exactly what she was trying to say. Better editing in this section might help. What made me persist was my need to find out more about Greenland and its Inuit people as well as to try and understand what made Ehrlich keep going back. At times I wondered if she was hoping to die out on the ice. There is a deep sadness in the author during this time that is reflected in discriptions of the effect of modernisation and outsider intervention in the lives of the indigenous people. Throughout the book she is always living on the edge of the society unable to find a way in. The lonely curious outsider. Her usage of Rasmussen as a guide to many different facets of the history and exploration of Greenland, and the American Artic improves over time. His travels and travails seem to have been a large part of her inspiration during the trips to Greenland.
An unusual book that is worth the effort it takes to read it.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
This Cold Heaven is a passionately written story by an adventuress women. The land that the author so poigantly evokes is breathtaking, and with glimpses at each chapter of the strikingly beautiful cover photo the reader can somehow feel part of the story as they follow her journey with the Greenland Inuit.

AP.dk

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