From Publishers Weekly
When Johnson went to work for the U.S. Antarctic Program (devoted to scientific research and education in support of the national interest in the Antarctic), he figured he'd find adventure, beauty, penguins and lofty-minded scientists. Instead, he found boredom, alcohol and bureaucracy. As a dishwasher and garbage man at McMurdo Station, Johnson quickly shed his illusions about Antarctica. Since he and his co-workers seldom ventured beyond the station's grim, functional buildings, they spent most of their time finding ways to entertain themselves, drinking beer, bowling and making home movies. The dormlike atmosphere, complete with sexual hijinks and obscene costume parties, sometimes made life there feel like "a cheap knock-off of some original meaty experience." What dangers there were existed mostly in the psychological realm; most people who were there through the winter developed the "Antarctica stare," an unnerving tendency to forget what they were saying mid-sentence and gaze dumbly at the station walls. And if the cold and isolation didn't drive one crazy, the petty hatreds and mindless red tape might. Though occasionally rambling and uneven, this memoir offers an insider's look at a place that few people know anything about and fewer still have ever seen. Photos.
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Review
(An) often-appalling, funny memoir... If Joseph Heller wrote Catch-22 today, he might set it at Mr. Johnson’s McMurdo. --
New York Times, August 1, 2005(S)ome kind of weird masterpiece---Survivor on Ice as imagined by B. Traven...fascinating, insane, soul-chilling and hysterical... --
Jerry Stahl...(O)ffers an insiders look at a place that few people know anything about and fewer still have ever seen. --
Publishers Weekly, May 16, 2005A bleakly funny new exposé of daily life at the United States Antarctic Program’s McMurdo and South Pole stations. --
Boston Globe, July 3, 2005Hilarious and informative… one of the best books of the year. --
The Stranger, October 13-19, 2005Humorous and often wittily sarcastic... only book available that shows modern Antarctic life and culture from the worker's perspective...Recommended. --
Library JournalNow the endlessly entertaining, finely observed, and engagingly written website has become this thorougly enjoyable book. --
The Press, Christchurch, New ZealandSavagely funny...grunt's-eye view of fear and loathing, arrogance and insanity...It's like M*A*S*H on ice, a bleak, black comedy. --
The Times of London, 11 June 2005This ‘grunt’s eye view’ is often deranged, funny, and always shrouded in numb-nut company bureaucracy. --
Penthouse
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