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Smack in the middle of the warmest Alaska summer in years comes a book of blizzards, glaciers, ice ages, manic polar explorers and frozen-solid wood frogs who spring to life in spring.
Anchorage's Bill Streever's new book, "Cold: Adventures in the World's Frozen Places" takes advantage of the author's years working in Barrow chairing the North Slope Science Initiative's Science Technical Advisory Panel to deliver a fascinating tour through the history, science and geography of cold weather on a warming planet. "Living here in Alaska, working on the North Slope, it's constantly in your face," Streever said. "I don't know if any one thing triggered the book. There's been lots of talk about global warming, and I thought a book that celebrated cold might be a nice complement. "In Alaska it might be a little odd, the book coming out in the middle of summer. "But it's a tourist season, and on the East Coast they're sweltering and looking for a way to cool off. (Releasing it in summer) was actually my editor's idea, and thought, 'That might be exactly right.' " With dozens of anecdotes detailing cold's effects on animals, history and geology, the book may lead readers to a long, cold shiver. Bingo, says Streever. That's success. So far, many reviews have been favorable. Says Harper's magazine: " 'Cold' describes a journey to a sensation that, in our comfortable, climate-controlled lives, is as foreign to most of us as New Guinea itself. (Though both offer opportunities for shedding a few pounds: 'Cold, really, is like malaria,' Streever writes. 'If it does not kill you, it will help you lose weight. Polar explorers eat more than 6,000 calories per day and still lose weight.') His account takes us month by month through a year at his home in Alaska, though over the course of that year he visits places ranging from the Philippines to Windsor Castle, where he unsuccessfully attempts to interview the Queen about her enormous, drafty hallways. Streever leads us through the complex debates about climate change and global warming with precision and an appreciation for a phenomenon that most of us dismiss as inconvenient, if we bother to think about it at all." Says the Miami Herald: "Another 90-plus day and many more in sight for the next few months. You think: Hey, if I walk the dogs at 7:30 a.m. it won't be so hot. Wrong. It's muggy and hot, and not even a freezing cold shower can make you feel any better about being outside. "So I find myself drawn to biologist Bill Streever's 'Cold.' Here in Florida, we usually fail to see it at all, unless someone drops the thermostat too low. So 'Cold' holds a certain appeal at this brutal time of a year, when Streever's dip into an Arctic swimming hole doesn't sound crazy at all but positively refreshing." Says Kirkus: "An unexpectedly fascinating look into a seemingly banal subject. A seamless blend of travelogue, history and scientific treatise." Fellow Alaska author Ned Rozell of Fairbanks works at the University of Alaska Geophysical Institute and has written extensively about Alaska weather. He met Streever last summer and thinks the book is a winner. "I like it," Rozell said of the book. "I think he took one of those really simple ideas that he did a great job with. It's an elegant subject. There's a lot about it and there's a lot of ways to explore a simple idea." Rozell is a seasoned Alaska outdoorsman and wilderness skier. He's written "Alaska Tracks: Footprints In The Big Country From Ambler To Attu" and "Walking My Dog Jane: From Valdez to Prudhoe Along the Trans-Alaska Pipeline." His coldest Alaska day? It came in late January of 1989 when the temperature hit minus-56 outside his wood-heated Fairbanks cabin. "It was impossible to keep it warm overnight. The dogs' water dishes kept freezing." Rozell thinks Streever's timing was near perfect. "Climate is something a lot of people didn't pay attention to until the mid-'90s, and then it kind of exploded," he said. And while the list of books dissecting global warming is long, Streever turns the usual approach on its head and deals with climate change in what he calls "a regretful tone. "The book celebrates low temperatures," he said, "the very thing being eroded by climate change."