Geographical

A COLD SPELL

- DUNCAN MADDEN

A Human History of Ice By Max Leonard

Bloomsbury

■ It’s strange to think of a time when ice was a novelty. When did Homo sapiens first encounter it? When did ice skating go from exotic pursuit to festive tradition? When were glaciers strange things that ‘humankind had to learn how to see’ rather than canaries in the coalmine of our eco-disastrous future? As Henry David Thoreau said, ‘Ice is an interestin­g subject for contemplat­ion.’

Max Leonard certainly agrees. A Cold Spell is his thought-provoking chronicle of humanity through an icy lens. From its hand in shaping the birth and birthplace of the human race to its modern status as metaphor for civilisati­on, Leonard charts the role ice has played, and continues to play, in our lives with great curiosity.

The book’s success is rooted in Leonard’s ability to weave something so ubiquitous into a journey of twists and turns. Traversing history, culture, language, science and human nature via evocative tangents, he consistent­ly frames ice in surprising and insightful ways, and in doing so lends it a magical quality. Nowhere is this truer than in stories of icy obsession – adventurer­s sacrificin­g their lives to navigate its polar domains, scientists dedicating theirs to unravellin­g the secrets it holds. It would have been remiss of Leonard to shy away from the role ice will also play in our future – or, more terrifying­ly, the potential role it will play as it melts away. He handles this deftly, smartly leaving it implicit rather than creating a platform to preach from – a silent dread that lingers and grows the more he reveals its fundamenta­l nature. Even the book’s name, A Cold Spell, speaks to its transience and fragility.

In his introducti­on, Leonard tells the story of William Windham, whose 18th-century excursions onto the Alpine Montanvert Glacier (known now as the Mer de Glace: ‘Sea of Ice’) resulted in the first English-language account of what a glacier was – or was like. It’s pertinent in so much that Windham entirely fails to achieve his goal: ‘I own to you, I am extremely at a loss how to give a right idea of it.’ In A Cold Spell, Leonard succeeds where Windham failed.

 ?? MARIANOCAL­A/SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? Evidence of global warming on the Mer de Glace in Chamonix, France
MARIANOCAL­A/SHUTTERSTO­CK Evidence of global warming on the Mer de Glace in Chamonix, France
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