“[Ransmayr’s] handling of the archives and his narrative of the polar expedition, his vivid description of the Arctic itself, might easily have come from a good imaginative historian: a Barbara Tuchman, say, or a J.C. Beaglehole. As a result, this is to some extent a book of information about difficult travel in one of the bleakest places on earth. . . . Most important of all, the novelist strips away the spurious glamour that usually attaches itself to the idea of hard traveling.”—New York Times Book Review
“Ransmayr has taken a sort of speculative freedom that a more traditional narrative might not allow. If we do not—cannot, perhaps—have the interior life of the commanders and crew, we receive by way of balance an elaborate and frequently lyrical meditation on the metaphysics of exploration.”—Times Literary Supplement (London)
“Christoph Ransmayr has written a curious novel that conveys the distancing, the numbness, of Arctic. . . . Ransmayr’s real protagonist is obsession itself, the call of the wil
d.”—Los Angeles Times
“A rousing trek to the Arctic, [The Terrors of Ice and Darkness] is also a subversive speculation—philosophical, psychological, and linguistic—on nature’s (and man’s) icy heart of darkness.”—The Boston Phoenix
“A nameless and largely invisible narrator recounts the 1981 disappearance of one Josef Mazzini, whose fascination with a 19th-century polar expedition has pulled him north, to the furthest arctic settlements. Accounts of the two journeys intersect and diverge, challenging the notion of history as linear, seducing the reader with startlingly detailed descriptions of polar exploration. . . . This aggressively intelligent narrative transforms the polar regions into unusually fertile ground.”—Publishers Weekly
“Fascinating, consummately crafted . . . Ransmayr’s language is every bit as artful as [Michael] Ondaatje’s, and he has a firmer grasp of narrative suspense. Best of all, he has latched onto a story device that catches the reader right up in his Arctic obsessions. . . . The terror and the lure of the Arctic become one and the same thing in his hands. He conjures them up in their full, seductive glory.”—San Francisco Chronicle
“A brilliant interweaving of journeys and voyages . . . Spellbinding and paradoxical in its subversive undermining of conventional notions of heroism and exploration.”—Bookwatch
“One of the German language’s most gifted young novelists.”—Library Journal