Denison's Ice Road

Denison's Ice Road

Edith Iglauer
$21.95

 


In savage blizzards, blinding whiteouts and 60-below-zero temperatures, steel axles snap like twigs; brakes and steering wheels seize up; bare hands freeze when they touch metal. The lake ice cracks and sometimes gives way, so the roadbuilders drive with one hand on the door, ready to jump.

John Denison and his crew waited for the coldest, darkest days of winter every year to set out to build a 520-kilometre road made of ice and snow, from Yellowknife in the Northwest Territories to a silver mine on Great Bear Lake, above the Arctic Circle - this is their story.

Edith Iglauer was the first outsider ever to accompany them as they worked. This book, her chronicle of a gruelling, fascinating journey through Canada's north, has sold over 20,000 copies since its first publication in 1974.
 
"The reader, if he or she doesn't watch out, will succumb to [Iglauer's] affection for Canada's 'true north'- a disease that people up there call Arctic Fever, and say is incurable."
New York Times

 


Harbour Publishing
ISBN: 9781550170412
Paperback / softback
5.5 in x 8.5 in - 238 pp
Publication Date: 01/01/1991
BISAC Subject(s): TRA001150-TRANSPORTATION / Automotive / Trucks, HIS046000-HISTORY / Polar Regions, BIO000000-BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / General 

Description


In savage blizzards, blinding whiteouts and 60-below-zero temperatures, steel axles snap like twigs; brakes and steering wheels seize up; bare hands freeze when they touch metal. The lake ice cracks and sometimes gives way, so the roadbuilders drive with one hand on the door, ready to jump.

John Denison and his crew waited for the coldest, darkest days of winter every year to set out to build a 520-kilometre road made of ice and snow, from Yellowknife in the Northwest Territories to a silver mine on Great Bear Lake, above the Arctic Circle - this is their story.

Edith Iglauer was the first outsider ever to accompany them as they worked. This book, her chronicle of a gruelling, fascinating journey through Canada's north, has sold over 20,000 copies since its first publication in 1974.
 
"The reader, if he or she doesn't watch out, will succumb to [Iglauer's] affection for Canada's 'true north'- a disease that people up there call Arctic Fever, and say is incurable."
New York Times

 

Details


Harbour Publishing
ISBN: 9781550170412
Paperback / softback
5.5 in x 8.5 in - 238 pp
Publication Date: 01/01/1991
BISAC Subject(s): TRA001150-TRANSPORTATION / Automotive / Trucks, HIS046000-HISTORY / Polar Regions, BIO000000-BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / General