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Terra Incognita: Travels in Antarctica

Terra Incognita: Travels in Antarctica
By Sara Wheeler

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Product Description

Sara Wheeler was the first woman selected by the American government to be the "Writer in Residence at the US South Pole Station". She spent six weeks at the pole. In this book she reveals how people live on the bases and how the landscape affects them.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #11428 in Books
  • Published on: 1997-09-04
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 320 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
Sara Wheeler first saw the Antarctic from the southernmost tip of Chile, while travelling the length and breadth of that country for a book she was writing. She knew then that she would return to a place which already seemed like home. A polar desert, the Antarctic is the province of scientific expeditions staffed by oddballs and mavericks who feel more at home on the ice than anywhere else in the world, but more than that, it has, over the years, come to serve as a metaphor for an inner journey into the depths of the soul. Fired by the exploits of Scott and Amundsen, Shackleton and Cherry-Garrard, people have gone to the wild places of the earth to meet themselves face to face, and Sara Wheeler was no exception. Having got herself onto US Antarctic Writers' and artists' Program, the first foreigner to do so, she prepared herself for the rigours of life at the bottom of the world with a mixture of research and polar training. Her book in turn reflects this; her love of the subject is obvious, particularly her writing about those who travelled ahead of her. She writes movingly of visiting Scott's hut and other important Antarctic monuments. What is perhaps a disappointment at times is the banality of life on the ice. For every moment of mystic communion on the ice, there are many hours of surprisingly ordinary incident in a most extraordinary place. As Wheeler acknowledges, those who live in the Antarctic must devise a hundred ways of getting along with one another but somehow one senses that Wheeler never really gets to grips with the modern Antarctic experience, and to some extent, as a visiting writer rather than a participating researcher, how can she ever hope to? Nevertheless, this is a fascinating account of daily life in the last great wilderness. (Kirkus UK)