ForeWord Magazine Book of the Year finalist – Nature Books, 2003
Alberta Book Cover Design of the Year Nominee
In this spirited mix of humor, science and adventure, naturalist Jamie Bastedo takes you on an uncommon romp through snow. Share in the quest of early snow scientists to unravel snow's many riddles:- Meet a madcap balloonist who risked it all to inspect snowstorms five miles up.
- Join snow ecologists as they gauge the importance of snow in shaping the lives of plants and animals.
- Pull your hair out with urban leaders, road crews, and train engineers as they do battle with paralyzing piles of snow.
- Discover the imprint of snow on native languages and some of our best art and literature.
- Explore the outer limits of snow–based recreation.
- And follow in Bastedo's foot, ski and snowshoe tracks as he guides you across creaking glaciers, through hushed evergreen forests and over frozen arctic seas in a playful exploration of the many facets and meanings of snow.
As inspirational as it is informative, this light–hearted book will appeal to anyone with even the slightest curiosity about that white stuff you will never again call "plain old snow."
Reviews
"Perfect if you want to experience winter vicariously."
–Yellowknifer
Jamie Bastedo's work is all about taking science to the streets. Well established as a popular science writer in his books Falling for Snow: A Naturalist's Journey into the World of Winter, Shield Country: The Life and Times of the Oldest Piece of the Planet, Reaching North: A Celebrationof the Subarctic and Blue Lake and Rocky Shores, he writes to inform and inspire, telling a "story of place." He also has written over 30 natural history features in magazines, including Up Here, Backpacker, and Winter Living. When not out on the land, he hangs his hat in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, where he lives with his wife and two daughters.
Click here to find out more about Jamie.
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