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Stories of Ice: Adventure, Commerce and Creativity on Canada's Glaciers

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Stories of Ice: Adventure, Commerce and Creativity on Canada's Glaciers
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Lynn Martel
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:336
Dimensions(mm): Height 241,Width 168
Category/GenreEnvironmental economics
Physical geography and topography
Applied ecology
Global warming
Social impact of environmental issues
Sustainability
Skiing
ISBN/Barcode 9781771603898
ClassificationsDewey:551.310971
Audience
General
Illustrations colour photographs throughout

Publishing Details

Publisher Rocky Mountain Books
Imprint Rocky Mountain Books
Publication Date 7 January 2021
Publication Country Canada

Description

MARKETING & PROMO: National, regional, and subject-specific print features, excerpts, review coverage, broadcast and television interviews Blogger outreach, online ads, and social media campaigns Publicity and promotion in conjunction with author's speaking engagements Outreach to subject-specific organizations, markets, and festivals Outreach to travel and tourism organizations Excerpts available Electronic ARCs Electronic blads KEY SELLING POINTS: Worldwide, glaciers are shrinking and receding. Their stories are in the news throughout the year, across the county, and featured on every news platform possible. In short, glaciers are "buzz worthy," and they represent an ongoing media story that is dynamic and constantly changing. Glacier recession and thermal expansion of the ocean together account for 75% of today's observed sea level rise, and their recession will affect North Americans in coastal locations (sea level rise) and central regions (floods in urban centres and desertification on the prairies and plains). While many books have been written about glaciers, a majority of them focus on glaciers mainly from a scientific perspective. This book looks at glaciers from a recreational, tourist, and economics point of view. While glaciers have become something of a buzzword in conversations about how Earth's climate is changing, most people simply see glaciers - if they think about them at all - as abstract blobs of ice melting on a landscape. Stories of Ice seeks to engage readers by sharing stories of personal interactions, hands-on or boots-on, with glaciers - as adventurers, scientists, business operators, or artists. For them, watching our glaciers melt is not something happening far away, to other people. Glacial melting is happening before our eyes, to our glaciers. It's personal. Each section will consist of four to six chapters totalling 20,000 words each, for a total of about 120,000 words or so. The book will be filled with beautiful and captivating photos by the author and several outstanding local mountain photographers. None will have been taken from aircraft, only by self-propelled foot or ski travel.

Author Biography

Lynn Martel grew up in Montreal and studied creative writing at Concordia University. Since the 1980s she has lived in the Canadian Rockies, where she writes about mountain adventure, culture, science, history, and personalities. Her work has appeared in numerous newspapers and magazines, including the Rocky Mountain Outlook, Explore, Gripped, Canadian Rockies Annual, Jasper Fitzhugh, Whistler Piqueand Calgary Herald. She is the author of three books published by RMB: Expedition to the Edge: Stories of Worldwide Adventure, Tales & Trails: Adventures for Everyone in the Canadian Rockies, and Stories of Ice: Adventure, Commerce and Creativity on Canadas Glaciers. Lynn lives in Canmore, Alberta.

Reviews

Praise for Stories of Ice: Adventure, Commerce and Creativity on Canada's Glaciers: "As these words and pictures attest, Canada's western glaciers are one of the world's great treasures - and now our job is to build a world where they can last for many millennia to come." --Bill McKibben, author of Falter: Has the Human Game Begun to Play Itself Out? "Martel's writing both glows with and is informed by her love for Canada's glaciers. Through intricate storytelling and thorough research, this book provides all we need to know about what is happening to, and in some instances being done to, these Canadian ecological treasures. Martel's intimate relationship with these glaciers over time is an example for all of us to follow, reminding us to love, care for and serve these sacred areas while they are still with us." --Dahr Jamail, author of The End of Ice: Bearing Witness and Finding Meaning in the Path of Climate Disruption "Lynn Martel loves glaciers and you should too! Stories of Ice is an engaging and meticulously researched look at the adventure, science and inspiration of glaciers. As the last vestiges of an undisturbed landscape that covered our entire continent, glaciers are a barometer of our relationship with the Earth, and Martel asks, What are glaciers telling us? Their disappearance is the visible face of climate change and Martel concludes with a stirring and positive call to action." --John Baldwin, co-author of Soul of Wilderness (with Linda Bily) "Glaciers are places of ice, mystery and magic for most of us, although we don't go there. They are also critical for our water security. And they are vanishing. Lynn Martel has produced an exhaustively researched, lovingly crafted and beautifully written body of work about our relationships with living ice, drawing from the adventures and experiences of explorers, climbers, scientists and others. This is a definitive work about living ice and the human lives it touches. Its timing is important; by the end of this century the glaciers she describes may well be gone. But such is the passion and power of this work that it might even help save those glaciers by mobilizing action to defend them from the climate changes that put their future - and ours - in doubt." --Kevin Van Tighem, author of Heart Waters, Our Place, The Homeward Wolf and Bears: Without Fear "While I admire the concept of stories shaped around the ephemeral aspect of ice, I'm particularly taken by Lynn's insights into the affinity shared for Jumbo Glacier in the central Purcells by the Indigenous Ktunaxa Nation and the Alpine Club of Canada's first official photographer, Byron Harmon. A century ago Harmon was inspired to capture the spiritually uplifting vista of Jumbo Glacier. And for the Ktunaxa, its sacred glacial meltwater has nourished their nature-based belief system since the beginning of time." --Pat Morrow, author of Searching for Tao Canyon, Footsteps in the Clouds and Beyond Everest "Lynn Martel's Stories of Ice is a fascinating and eclectic mix of tales about multiple aspects of glaciers: artistic, scientific, economic, recreational, touristic, historical and even spiritual. Here in Canada we are richly endowed with glacial ice, but unfortunately it is disappearing quickly. This personal and informative book is a must read for anyone interested in the effects of climate change." --Chic Scott, author of Pushing the Limits, Powder Pioneers, and Deep Powder and Steep Rock "Most of us think of glaciers as frozen wastelands, but Lynn Martel's well-crafted stories and pages of stunning photographs unfreeze their secrets with warm humour, sharp wit and a lifetime of personal experience. No glacier will ever look the same to you after you've read this book, nor should it - the hard blue ice of Canada's glaciers is a measure of our planet's health and our human relationship to it. If you're going to read just one book about glaciers, this should be it; but Stories of Ice may ignite a hot interest in all things frozen." --Will Gadd, adventure athlete and professional guide "This fine book is a masterwork, an amazing marriage of experience and craft that can only emerge from a lifetime of hard-won competence and years of covering and reporting on every aspect of science, art and adventure across the vast geography of the entire mountain West." --Robert William Sandford, author of Our Vanishing Glaciers: The Snows of Yesteryear and the Future Climate of the Mountain West "From snow spiders to rock flour, from the Illecillewaet to the Chaba, Lynn Martel has crafted an impressive volume, taking the reader on a personal journey onto and into the fascinating world of ice." --Bernadette McDonald, author of Art of Freedom, Alpine Warriors, Freedom Climbers and Keeper of the Mountains