My Arctic Journal. 1892, by Josephine Diebitch-Peary. Mrs. Peary, the young wife of the famous Arctic explorer Robert E. Peary, accompanies her husband on a dangerous, year long expedition to explore northern Greenland. While her husband's expeditionary party treks far off into the interior, the majority of her time is spent alone at camp near a small, remote, previously undiscovered Eskimo community. Her journal, despite being flat, detached and generally poorly written, provides important, never before documented, ethnographic information, specifically the sexual practices {wife swapping, "Eskimo kissing", etc.} of the indigenous Inuit people. Although not widely known contemporarily, on a future expedition her husband fathers a child with an Inuit woman. Perhaps Josephine's fear of her husbands infidelity led her to participate in an expedition that could only promise her hardship and isolation?