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10 Reviews
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The reader is part of the voyage,
By Ralph (Calgary, Alberta) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Antarctica: A Year at the Bottom of the World (Hardcover)
If you are in the least bit interested in Antarctica, as I have been for about 20 years, READ THIS BOOK. Mastro is a brilliant travel writer whose simple, witty, easily enjoyable style keeps you feeling as though you were there experiencing the whole thing yourself. An amazing narrative insight into several different areas of the frozen continent, in weather conditions beyond belief, as well a trip below the ice on a diving expedition, and a trip to Bird Island on the Antarctic Peninsua. I learned so much form this book! It would be well worth the price even if it were only in text form. The amazing pictures throughout it really add to the sense of what it is really like there.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
LOVED IT,
By libertychick1976 (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Antarctica: A Year at the Bottom of the World (Hardcover)
This book is amazing!!! The photos are spectacular, and the author is very descriptive -- he makes you feel like you are actually there. Recommend highly.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Seasons at the Bottom of the World.,
By Julianne K. Ziefle "uwfotogal" (The Woodlands, TX USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Antarctica: A Year at the Bottom of the World (Hardcover)
Jim Mastro's book is beautifully photographed and written. By seasons,there are gripping stories of his time spent (nearly 4 years) in the coldest place on earth. It's almost like reading his journal. I guess it is. Between sighting Orcas and other incredible sights they also endured deadly winter storms to what could have been the worst disaster of the history of the U.S. Antartic Program. The reader really feels the cold as Mastro's descriptions are vivid in detail add a sense of realness. Imagine nights that last all day and days that last all night. There are a lot of exciting vividly described adventures/photos in this book. Well written and photographed, I recommend this book to all adventurists! It's a great coffee table book too. Julianne
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Historical perspective on Jim Mastro's book,
By L. J. Conrad (Washougal, WA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Antarctica: A Year at the Bottom of the World (Hardcover)
Antarctic accounts come in a number of different flavors. (Skip the next four paragraphs to cut to the chase).The first variety is the explorer's official account. They were - and are - written to inform the public of the expedition's accomplishments, generally by the expedition's leader and frequently to help pay the inevitable bills that survive the expedition. James Clark Ross' "A Voyage of Discovery and Research, In the Southern and Antarctic Regions, during the years 1839-43", Robert Scott's "The Voyage of the Discovery" and Ernest Shackleton's "The Heart of the Antarctic" are among the classics. There are scientists recounting a particular piece of work (Bill Green's "Water, Ice & Stone") or a career (Charles Swithenbank's "An Alien in Antarctica", "Foothold on Antarctica" and "Forty Years on Ice"), transcribed journals (Edward Wilson's "Diary of the Discovery Expedition to the Antarctic Regions 1901-1904" and Charles Wright's "Silas"), photographers (Ansel Adams' "Antarctica"), historians (among them Ann Savours and T.H. Baughman), and a philosopher (Stephen Pyne's "The Ice"). A major category is that of the instant expert or Antarctic tourist. These are generally writers who have conducted extensive research in preparation for a brief sojourn in Antarctica. The numerous works range from trivial to profound. Jim Henderson's IGY book ("One Foot at the Pole" - he had an artificial limb) is quite droll while Sara Wheeler's recent accounts are excellent. The instant experts provide a snapshot of life on the ice through the eyes of an honored visitor. They are generally sponsored by a National Antarctic Program and have privileges most residents of Antarctica can only imagine, primarily access to the ice edge and its fauna as well as to areas beyond an hour's walk from main bases. The Chase. There are many contemporary residents of Antarctica. They provide services and are the foundation of the infrastructure that supports the scientists and privileged tourists. Those residents' lives are full, rich and very different from those they support. Some come to the ice for the adventure, some for the community and some for the job. Many are articulate, multiple-season, steady residents whose life includes 6 months on the ice working and 6 months off the ice enjoying the fruits of that labor. Few, however, have published their observations. Jim Mastro was a resident who spent both summer seasons and winters on the ice. He held positions of responsibility without the burden of setting policies or practices needing defense. In short, Jim worked there. He describes what makes the Antarctic community so unique in a book that is a detailed account of a year on the ice. Mastro's book "A Year at the Bottom of the World" is more detailed and far richer than the brief and sunny snapshot generally taken by the tourists. Mastro recalls exploits that are frequently amusing, occasionally dangerous and in some cases the result of not-so-great decisions. His tone is pleasantly understated as he recognizes danger without descending to melodramatic proclamations. The book is visually appealing and illustrated with Mastro's superb photographs. It is historically accurate with sufficient background information to allow a new student of the Antarctic to read it without additional reference material (without becoming another prosaic account of already-told history). One of the primary attractions of this book is that rather than explaining the difficulties of a hugely complex expedition or the rarified atmosphere of high academic accomplishment, Mastro tells of living and working there. It is obvious that he is good at what he does and that he enjoys himself, but he's basically one of the guys. There is some drama but little death-defying adventure; some disappointment but not much tragedy; some accomplishments but no nominations for the Nobel Prize. Mastro is a pretty normal guy in an extraordinary place with concerns and accomplishments that are both imaginable and reachable for the rest of us. Mastro's keen eye, wry turn of phrase and dramatic photographs make this an accurate and engaging account of the Antarctic life. Technology has modified a few details, but the basics of a full year in Antarctica are unaltered since the first winter-over more than a century ago. This book is the best account of contemporary life in Antarctica.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
First Person Text And Beautiful Photographs,
By
This review is from: Antarctica: A Year at the Bottom of the World (Hardcover)
The author, Jim Mastro, got to spend one year at the bottom of the world and he wrote first person text and included beautiful photographs in his presentation. Some of the photographs capture the incredible beauty of Antartica and of the beauty of the wildlife.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Want to work in Antarctica? Read this first,
By Liz "teacher" (NC) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Antarctica: A Year at the Bottom of the World (Hardcover)
I worked with Jim Mastro during the winter of 1986. One small correction, I was with him in the BioLab when we dribbled the glow-in-the-dark tubes in the sump pump. Apart from that, Jim writes beautifully and describes life in McMurdo to a tee. Makes me wish I had kept a journal but at least I can read Jim's recounting. The photos are magnificent.
4.0 out of 5 stars
what it is like to work and wonder way way down under,
By Robert J. Crawford (Balmette Talloires, France) - See all my reviews (TOP 1000 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Antarctica: A Year at the Bottom of the World (Hardcover)
This is a clearly written, funny, moving and fascinating account of what it was like for the author to work in Antarctica over a number of years. While he has told it like a one-year trip, in fact it is a distillation of 14 years experience.
The book is distinguished in several respects. First, the photography is wonderful - just it is worth the price of admission. Second, there is the story of working there as a scientist, in particular the work underwater. It is really fascinating and full of quirky tidbits, like mummified seals thousands of years old or the faulty insulation of some fish. Third, there are the personal tales of what it is like for the residents, and they are harrowing not in any adventuresome sense, but in the psychological demands placed on them. Women beware of living there with so many hungry males! Warmly recomended. It is also beautifully written from a stylistic standpoint. Truly a mini-masterpiece of the genre.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Better than expected,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Antarctica: A Year at the Bottom of the World (Hardcover)
I expected a tome from someone who worked in Antarctica, heavy on the narrative, light on coffee-table book quality photographs. I was pleasantly surprised to find a fine quality book with excellent photographs. Well-written and nicely laid out, this makes a good introduction to modern-day Antarctic history. I've read the account of the doctor who had breast cancer and her rescue "Ice Bound" as well as a scientist's account of working in the Antarctic area, "Crystal Desert". Neither of them were as good as this book. I've travelled to the Antarctic peninsula (as well as the fantastic South Georgia Island, a sub-antarctic island), and it's a wonderfully beautiful place. Some of the photographs capture the southernmost continent's incredible beauty and equally fantastic wildlife. Recommended.
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Haunting Beauty of Antarctica,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Antarctica: A Year at the Bottom of the World (Hardcover)
Jim Mastro got to do what so few of us are able to do - to spend a year at the bottom of the world and experience the frenetic summers and the solitary winters. His experiences are recorded here to share with readers and makes for a fascinating and beautiful book. Mastro spent a year working in Antarctica as a diver and lab support person. He has recorded in words and photographs what he experienced and saw. And this is what is different about his book. Other books such as "Terra Incognita" and "Antarctica: Exploring the Extreme: 400 Years of Adventure" try to describe the beauty and danger of the southern continent. This book shows you. The photos are glorious and breathtaking and serve to illustrate the stories Mastro writes. If anything now I am even more determined that I must see Antarctica myself. He gives you the majesty of this bleak land, as well as the intimacy that comes as the night closes in for the winter, and finally the small slivers of joy that come as the winter begins to recede and light returns to the continent. A cycle of life and rebirth that so few of us will ever get to see is wonderfully illustrated here. Just a wonderful book.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Smart, spectacular view of life in Antarctica,
By Foramdude (New York, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Antarctica: A Year at the Bottom of the World (Hardcover)
If your goal is to get a sense of what it's like to live and work in Antarctica, then Mastro's book "A Year at the Bottom of the World" is a must. If you just want to look at spectacular pictures of the Antarctic, then Mastro's book is a must. If you want an affordable, top-quality tabletop book, then Mastro's is a must. If you don't want to warp your coffee table top ... well, unlike a typical picture book (which will accomplish said warping), Mastro's is a sensible 10.25 x 11.25-inch, four pound gem. I've been going to the ice since 1984 and have read many other accounts. (I guess that makes me knowledgeable.) Mastro's is by far the best. His photography captures the Antarctic scenery -- above and below the ice -- brilliantly. Stunning, clever, and fascinating are also appropriate descriptors. The text is a first person narrative; I normally find these to be terribly boring. So initially I bought this book for the pictures. (Did I mention that the images are spectacular, brilliant, stunning, clever, and fascinating?) But, as you can imagine, it's hard to avoid glancing at the text, too. As I read more, I gawked at the pictures less. I was genuinely surprised at how much I *enjoyed* reading it! He cleverly builds the narrative, illustrating his growth from a naive Californian geek into ... well, whatever Mastro has transformed into after all these experiences. Some of his stories are thoughtful & somber, some are funny, and all are interesting. Bravo Mastro!
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Antarctica: A Year at the Bottom of the World by Jim Mastro (Hardcover - June 2002)
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