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Under Polaris: An Arctic Quest

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Based on Washburn's journal of the first three years of her journeys in the Arctic beginning in 1938, including photographs by her and her husband. They traveled the coastal areas of Victoria and King William Islands by boat and dog sled. She made a concerted effort to learn the survival skills of the Inuit women, and describes the process of making caribou skin clothing for herself and her husband. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

247 pages, Hardcover

First published February 1, 1999

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18 reviews1 follower
January 22, 2016


I came across this work in a used book store for about a buck, having skimmed it, and thinking it would make a breezy kind of read. It turned out to be so much more. I enjoyed it to the hilt. The work is comprised of the accounts of Tahoe Washburn as she and her geologist husband spend their winters from 1938 to 1941 in the far north region of Canada's N.W.T., doing research on glacial impact of the last Ice Age on the area. The geology aspect, though, comprises very little of the book. The vast majority of it is a monologue of how life in that desolate and forbidding region was conducted by its inhabitants - the Inuit people, the R.C.M.P., the various adventurers who found their way there in the previous 30 years - and how the author and her husband, Linc, integrated their lives with these people, adapting in the process of conducting their work. The writing style is taut and factual, like a well-written diary (which I suppose is what it is), yet descriptive and flows well. Her observations drew me into that environment in a very compelling way. I found myself reading quite slowly, so as to drink it all in, and dissolved myself into seeing that world as she saw it. An additional factor is that the book is liberally interspersed with many of the author's personal black and white photos of the area taken in the course of their work; landscapes, people, the environment of the sub-Arctic. The book is short, making it a pretty quick read, but one that the reader is tempted to dwell upon. (It wasn't until well into the book that I discovered it had been autographed by the author on the title page.) Excellent.
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