Blue lakes and rocky shores / Will we return once more?
The Artic has long been romanticized as a land of unyielding frost, immutable, stolid, unchanging. While the spirit of the tundra can still be traced in the movements of the hardy animals and peoples who call it home, a new land - and the loss of the old one - can be glimpsed just under the surface. following the waning light of a westward sun, Neil Shea walks among wolf packs on Canada's Ellesmere island, follows the trail of Indigenous Netsilingmiut and Tlicho peoples of Nunavut and the Northwest Territories, chases the shadows of elusive caribou across Alaska, and witnesses the potential devastation of oil and gas development in America's farthest flung wilds. In the European Artic, the retreating cold makes way for a Cold War between global powers over who controls the land and the riches beneath the ice melt.
The greatest revelation the frozen earth provides is that the Artic is not a monolith, but rather a rich diversity - out of one, many - bonded by shattering cold, seasons of darkness, and a pure, inimitable light. In the starkness of the midnight sun, the wind-swept atmosphere, and the frosted abyss of a land which ekes every drop of life it can out of its inhabitants, Neil Shea crafts an expansive, intimate tale of an Artic mid-transformation - a metamorphosis of a land both frightening and devastating emerging before our very eyes.
This was an incredibly poignant and heart-wrenching tale of a land many of us will never visit, but which hold such vital life and importance in our ever-warming world. I can tell Neil Shea has a deep-seated love for the Artic and can see the influence his time at National Geographic has had - this was beautifully written, engaging, and definitely tugged at that part of me which wants to throw everything to the wind and take off into the wild blue yonder. An observation and told in phases as he travels from east to west at the top of the world, each phase of the book offers a beautiful glimpse into all the Artic offers - its indifference, its wild abandon, its defiance, and ultimately its yielding resistance to a world that continues to move on without it.
Many who grew up in the 2000s I think more than most have an urgency and (hopefully) a desperation about climate change and the havoc it continues to leech into the land - while much of the world has moved on in the face of ever-present and more flagrant threats to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, the slow death of a way of life in the face of a melting world should still remain at the forefront. More than offering a solution to a problem bigger than the sky, Shea's exploration and documentation of a lifestyle and ecosystem fading away invites readers to experience the world as it changes, and will hopefully reignite something wild, something stark, and something yearning in them as they stalk the tundra through all its phases in homage to a land out of time that's becoming something new.