The Terrors of Ice and Darkness explained

The Terrors of Ice and Darkness
Author:Christoph Ransmayr
Translator:John E. Woods
Title Orig:Die Schrecken des Eises und der Finsternis
Country:Germany
Language:German
Publisher:Brandstätter
Pub Date:1984
English Pub Date:1991
Pages:256
Isbn:9783854470434

The Terrors of Ice and Darkness is a 1984 novel by the Austrian writer Christoph Ransmayr. It tells the stories of the 1872–74 Austro-Hungarian North Pole expedition, of a young Italian man who disappeared in 1981 while researching the expedition, and of the narrator, who tries to figure out what happened to the Italian.

Publication

The book was published in Germany in 1984. An English translation by John E. Woods was published in 1991 through Grove Press.[1]

Reception

Publishers Weekly wrote: "This aggressively intelligent narrative transforms the polar regions into unusually fertile ground."[2] Geoffrey Moorhouse wrote in The New York Times: "Were it not for the invented character of Mazzini there would be no justification for categorizing Mr. Ransmayr's book as a novel at all. ... As a result, this is to some extent a book of information about difficult travel in one of the bleakest places on earth." The critic wrote that the book also is "about a number of psychological factors inseparable from quests", and "most important of all, the novelist strips away the spurious glamour that usually attaches itself to the idea of hard traveling."[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: The terrors of ice and darkness. WorldCat. 742440587 . 2017-02-14.
  2. Web site: Fiction Book Review: The Terrors of Ice and Darkness by Christoph Ransmayr. Publishers Weekly. 1991-07-01. 2017-02-14.
  3. Web site: Moorhouse. Geoffrey. Geoffrey Moorhouse. 1991-08-11. A Soul Can Freeze at 40 Below. The New York Times. 2017-02-14.