Math.com Store
 Location:  Home » Math Books » Rowing to Latitude: Journeys Along the Arctic's Edge  

Rowing to Latitude: Journeys Along the Arctic's Edge

Rowing to Latitude: Journeys Along the Arctic's EdgeAuthor: Jill Fredston
Publisher: North Point Press

List Price: $15.00
Buy Used: $1.52
as of 11/25/2009 01:49 CST details
You Save: $13.48 (90%)



New (31) Used (52) Collectible (2) from $1.52

Seller: so_goodwill
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 29 reviews
Sales Rank: 131124

Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Paperback
Pages: 312
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 8.1 x 5.5 x 0.9

ISBN: 0865476551
Dewey Decimal Number: 797.122092
EAN: 9780865476554
ASIN: 0865476551

Publication Date: October 10, 2002
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: A copy that has been read, still in great condition. Pages are intact, not marred by highlighting or notes. The spine reamins undamaged. Thank You for your purchase, it goes to a non profit organization and will be shipped in 2 business days. USPS Quotes 4-14 business days and could take up to 21 business days once the book has shipped.

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 16-20 of 29



5 out of 5 stars Something unique and marvelous   February 27, 2002
Michael J. Muller (Queensbury, New York USA)
7 out of 8 found this review helpful

Rowing more than 20,000 miles along the coastlines of Arctic oceans and rivers, this is the well told adventure of a husband and wife team that spent their summers over many years seeking out the wild coastal places around and above the Arctic circle. The author is a wonderful writer who more than capably presents tales of adventure and courage with an ample dose of personal insight. To read this book is to share in the adventure and excitement found along these barren coasts and wild Arctic rivers. Well worth reading and highly recommended.


5 out of 5 stars A superb book by a marvelous writer   January 29, 2002
Douglas BULLIS (Anaheim, CA USA)
21 out of 23 found this review helpful

This one of those books that is not only a page-turner, when you get to the end you peek under the back cover hoping there's another four hundred pages.

Arctic coasts seem to have been made for Jill Fredston and her husband Doug, and they for the coasts. As if their income career as Alaskan avalanche forecasters wasn't thrill enough, in summers they airfreight his kayak and her scull from this to that spot in the Arctic, and then row - yes, oars - 900 to 1,500 miles down rivers, along coasts, around islands like Svalbard (Spitzbergen on some maps) so remote that rare few have ever examined close-up the majesty of their unpeopled sides. They've been wined, dined, drank to, photographed, endured the insults of hostile locals, even shot at. Their litany of terrifying waveform to tremulous eddy is why this book is such a page-turner. Yet they keep going - 20,000 miles worth thus far.

Arctic seas are not for everyone, nor its shores. Times of paeanic bliss are cleft short by howling ice storms from out of nowhere. The inexpressible shoreside beauty of a hundredfold pod of whales is quite another thing if you are in a nineteen-foot rowing scull surrounded by twenty-foot thrashing flukes. The utter peace of standing before a 680-year-old, six-foot-diameter cedar is, a few hours later, a gut-wrenching horror trying to navigate through sucking tidal gyres like tornadoes of the sea, dozens of yards deep and just as merciless. They routinely assail waves that would give a Hawaiian surfer pause - not eight, not ten, but fifteen to twenty feet, whose tops are being truncated to spume by the wind. The Perfect Storm without a motor. The white shape afar in the midst of a skyscape of blue and worldscape of white is just another piece of ice till it rises to ten feet, has claws, and is charging at you, roaring, roaring. It is hard to believe that two 5" by 8" pages sprawled across your lap can evoke the same gut-wrenching fear as a Hollywood special-effects epic, but about a quarter of this book does just that. Perhaps they are so fearless because they are so well conditioned. Their resting pulse rate of 37 (versus 60 to 72 for most people) surely has something to do with their icy unintimidability.

Why would anyone in reasonable possession of their wits opt for this as a lifestyle? It's certainly not for merit-badge product endorsements. They are a very private couple, even humble when around people. Not so around sea, wind, ice, and cliffs. Ms. Fredston articulates her philosophy at the outset:

"In the process of journeying, we seem to have become the journey, blurring the boundaries between the physical landscape outside of ourselves and the spiritual landscape within. Once, during a long crossing in Labrador, we found ourselves in fog so thick it was impossible to see even the ends of our boats. Unable to distinguish gray water from gray air, I felt vertigo grab hold of my equilibrium, and the world began to spin. I needed a reference point - the sound of Doug's voice or the catch of my blades as they entered the water - to know what was right side up. Rounding thousands of miles of ragged shoreline together, driven by the joys and fears of not knowing what lies around the next bend, has helped us find an interior compass."
A little later, using images reminiscent of T.W, Eliot's poem "The Dry Salvages," she becomes that which she experiences:

"By the time I reached the sea, I know that I could do far worse than to live life like the Yukon [River]: Keep moving but find places to slow down. Don't go straight at the expense of meandering. Nurture others; accommodate both change and tradition. Savor the element of surprise. Be gracious, accepting, resilient."

Further on she again addresses her sense for spirit of place:

"Person, place, or thing? The games we played as kids had such seemingly simple answers. How can a person be a place? How can a place not become part of a person? We remember a place not just for its beauty but for the way that beauty made us feel; these feelings are woven into an emotional tapestry we call self. The most special places are the ones that give texture to our dreams, that ground us, make us whole, remind us of what is real."

Rowing to Latitude would be just another human-conquers-nature thriller if it wasn't for Jill Fredston's writing. Where has she been all our lives? Erudite, heartfelt, eloquent, adventurous, witty, tragic, liberating, concerned, poetic, blunt - all this can happen on a single page, and very often does. Her entire book has the quality of the moods of the sea, vividly personalized by her ability to melt the descriptive into the spiritual. She writes rings around the mass-market travel scribblers autographing books at Borders these days. It is a pity that she and her husband are Arctic devotees; there is a whole rest of the world that surely could do with her talent, with his compassion, with their insights. However, considering the fact that they think a fifty-degree day a swelter fit only for basking on a beach surrounded by icebergs, you know they would melt into popcorn oil if they tackled, say, Bali and the Sunda Islands.

So let's hope they don't run out of shorelines, their bones don't give out on them, and Ms. Fredston's hard drive doesn't crash. Five more books from them would be just about right. More pictures, too. The sixteen herein were a saucer of chip dip compared with the image banquet that is the Arctic. In this environment, where the energy of life is dribbled so sparingly, Ms. Fredston sees the underlying spiritual energy of the earth which must be before life can be, just as soul and heart must be before mind can be.


2 out of 5 stars Fantastic voyage   January 21, 2002
1 out of 6 found this review helpful

I picked up Ms. Fredston's book becasue I had visited the Yukon river and inland waterways of Alaska. She writes (or is edited) quite plainly and gives a wonderful travel itinerary with little bits of her feelings along the way. What I found most absent is the eloquence of description of the country and her formidable navigation with Doug Fesler, who seems only an appendage, albeit a deeply loved one. If this were only a "see what I did" magazine article, it would be appropriate, but not as a book. Perhaps reviewing each experience with more in depth would be appropriate.


5 out of 5 stars New Self-Realization   January 20, 2002
Kathleen R. Jones (Wasilla, AK United States)
5 out of 6 found this review helpful

I borrowed this book from a friend, and now plan to buy one of my own, to keep. My husband and I are both teachers..which has given us summers to float (or row) and travel around our beautiful state every summer. So, relating to Jill's adventures has really given me new realization of how capable I can be in my adventures too.
We met Jill briefly while poling for a friend in the midst of an avalanche rescue in Turnagain Pass...she came across as so brave & solid..now that I've read her personal insight...its nice to know that as an Alaskan woman, heading into the great outdoors, I can still have some fear of "what may happen" but it shouldn't stop me from taking every moment in that I can. She's a great inspiration. Having traveled the Yukon River and Inside Passage, Jill tells it exactly as it is...great job! I can't wait for summer!



4 out of 5 stars Great book for ANYONE who likes explorers...   December 19, 2001
Robert A. Baker (Las Vegas, Nevada)
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

I am not a rower or boater. But, recently saw Jill at a booksigning here in Anchorage and she did a great job. I really enjoyed the book with it's lay boating descriptions, her philisophical pontifications and her really clear perspective of herself and the world around her.

The book belongs in anybody's library that has memorable adventure-explorer dewey-decimal system.

Showing reviews 16-20 of 29



Disclaimer

Return to Math.com
Sponsored Links
Math Jobs


Quick Links
Return to Math.com
Math Tutoring
Top Selling Electronics
Textbooks
Math Jobs
Privacy
Categories
Calculators
Math Books
Math DVD
Math Games
Math Toys
Math Software
Game Systems
Math Apparel
Subcategories
Paperback
Mass Market
Trade
Related Categories
• Women
Specific Groups
Biographies & Memoirs
Subjects
Books
• Travel
Biographies & Memoirs
Subjects
Books
• General
Transportation
Nonfiction
Subjects
Books
• Nature Writing
Outdoors & Nature
Subjects
Books
• General
Biographies
Sports
Subjects
Books
• General
Canoeing
Water Sports
Sports
Subjects
• Polar Regions
Winter Sports
Sports
Subjects
Books
• General
Sports
Subjects
Books
• Arctic
Polar Regions
Travel
Subjects
Books
• General
Alaska
States
United States
Travel
• General
Travel
Subjects
Books
• Paperback
Binding (binding)
Refinements
Books
• Printed Books
Format (feature_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books