Last published at August 7, 2009 at 6:46 PM
Comments (0)
E-mail article
Print
Share
Book review
"Cold": the frigid side of life, from fatal frostbite to frozen woolly caterpillars
"Cold: Adventures in the World's Frozen Places" is author/biologist Bill Streever's encyclopedic narrative of all things cold.
Special to The Seattle Times
"Cold: Adventures in the World's Frozen Places"
by Bill Streever
Little, Brown, 291 pp., $24.99
The year 1816 was known as the Year Without Summer. In April of 1815, Mount Tambora in Indonesia erupted and expelled a hundred times more ash than Mount St. Helens.
As the residue circled the globe, it blocked sunlight, leading to sunrises described as "though in a cloud of smoke, red and rayless." Riots ensued across Europe and food was so scarce that people fed themselves grain meant for their horses.
In response, German baron Karl Drais invented a new form of transport, a steerable wooded scooter, called the Draisine or Laufmaschine (running machine), which eventually morphed into the bicycle.
Such are the types of arcane facts ferreted out by Bill Streever in his new book, "Cold: Adventures in the World's Frozen Places." Streever, author of "Green Seduction: Money, Business, and the Environment" and a biologist with BP Exploration in Alaska, has assembled an encyclopedia of all things cold, from detailing the effects of frostbite to an amusing little tombstone epitaph: "Bless my eyes; Here he lies; In a sad pickle; Kill'd by an icicle."
Like many niche histories, "Cold" is fact-filled and the type of book you can open to any page and find something interesting.
Along the way, we can applaud the fortitude of the classic characters of cold, such as explorers Ernest Shackleton, Robert Falcon Scott, and Apsley Cherry-Garrard, who wrote the wonderful book "The Worst Journey in the World."
We can marvel at the classic science of cold: Ice Ages, the race to absolute zero, and woolly bear caterpillars, which withstand utter cold by freezing solid until warmer times.
We can be glad we didn't meet the fates of those who suffered at the hands of extreme cold, including the Franklin expedition, whose members froze to death in the Arctic in 1845; and the 250 who died in the Children's Blizzard of 1888.
While well-written and easy to read, "Cold" confounded me in one respect. Streever seems to play down the greatest threat to his passion for low temperatures: climate change. He does acknowledge that climates in many areas have warmed, but he notes almost flippantly that we will still need Gore-Tex and Thinsulate.
He quotes three prominent naysayers, leaving one to believe that "Oh, so there's a little warming; not to worry." I suspect many biologists and climatologists, who Streever writes "tended to camp with the climate change kooks" would not agree and would note climate change is real and happening because of our actions.
In the end, "Cold" feels like a greatest-hits album of cover songs; many of Streever's stories have been told before, often with great skill. (To his credit, he does have a thorough section of notes with details on the original works.) But in this long, hot summer, "Cold," and its vast imagery of ice and snow and glaciers, is a fine and cooling anecdote.
Copyright © The Seattle Times Company
NEW - 10:24 AM
Shelf Talk | Medical Lectures + medical info: at your public library!
Gordon, Egan among PEN/Faulkner award nominees
Comics: Flaws aside, animated 'All-Star Superman' still fun
Case closed: Dick Tracy artist retires

nwautos
(Daihatsu) Daihatsu FC Sho Case This futuristic four-seater debuted at the Tokyo auto show in December. Its seats can fold flat into the floor and th...
Post a comment
- SPU surprises neighbors with sale of Queen Anne rec property
- Beer-drinking bridge builders will get training from a counselor
- Boy's pat on president's head captured for history
- Police arrest New Jersey man who confessed to killing Etan Patz
- Man arrested in disappearance of NYC boy Etan Patz
- Amazon addresses criticism at meeting
- Comedy gets zapped in 'Men in Black 3' | Movie review
- Chone Figgins likely to survive Miguel Olivo's return | The Hot Stone League
- Mariners avoid making Chone Figgins call, but can't keep doing nothing with him | Mariners Blog
- Get a sitter — please — for these 10 great date-night restaurants | All You Can Eat
- NAACP returns to relevance by backing same-sex marriage
357 - Mariners try to extend some other team's misery for a change
337 - Quit drinking beer on job, Highway 520 builders told
314 - SPU surprises neighbors with sale of Queen Anne rec property
248 - Traffic study gives arena a green light; critics see red
220 - Protesters rally outside Amazon annual meeting
163 - Romney slams Obama, teachers unions
142 - Mariners avoid making Chone Figgins call, but can't keep doing nothing with him
122 - White House puts the Supreme Court on trial over health-care law
97 - Swing states' economic rebounds brighten Obama's prospects
78
- Dig into colorful history at Oregon's John Day Fossil Beds
- SPU surprises neighbors with sale of Queen Anne rec property
- Get a sitter — please — for these 10 great date-night restaurants | All You Can Eat
- Beer-drinking bridge builders will get training from a counselor
- Gates Foundation grants give local groups a boost
- Zumiez rebounds from recession better than most
- Boy's pat on president's head captured for history
- Recipe: Brown Butter Asparagus Risotto
- 2 ex-Hopelink workers accused in $100,000 bus-pass theft
- Super Moon meets the Space Needle | The Reader's Lens







