The Bookshelf
The Far North is a mysterious place, but thanks to Barry Lopez's Arctic Dreams, it no longer lives solely in my imagination. Lopez's far reaching work covers Arctic history, biology, and anthropology yet is much more than a book of facts (however, I did learn that Muskoxen take delight in playing in streams, and the liver of a polar bear contains toxic levels of vitamin A). Fundamentally, Lopez's book is a compendium on the relationship between humans and the arctic landscape from prehistoric times all the way up to today. To truly understand it Lopez notes,
"You must get off into the country and sleep on the ground, or take an afternoon to take a tussok apart. Travel on the schedule of the muskoxen. Camp on a seaward point and watch migrating sea ducks in their days of passage. You need to stand before the green serpentine walls of the Jade Mountains, or walk out over the sea ice to the flaw lead in winter to hear the pack ice grinding and scraping... When you have walked for days under the remoteness of the world ... you begin to sense the timeless, unsummarized dimensions of a deeper landscape."
I've never done most of those things and probably never will, but I'm sure glad Lopez did and is able to describe to us what it is like. |