The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Majestic Iceland melted my heart

- By Bill Gibb with Jan Turk Petrie

Jan Turk Petrie is a former English teacher with an MA in creative writing from the University of Gloucester­shire.

She has just released No God For A Warrior (Pintail Press), a futuristic thriller set in a dark, cold Nordic city, the follow-up to Until The Ice Cracks.

She has also published some award-winning short fiction.

AS a reluctant flier, it takes a lot to get me on a plane.

However, having heard so much about Iceland and its extraordin­ary geology, I just had to see it for myself.

Reykjavik is deservedly a magnet for tourists with a famous foodie scene.

We stayed in the old part of the city and ate wonderfull­y fresh seafood.

At the Elf School, Magnús Skarphédin­sson served us tea and cakes whilst telling fascinatin­g tales of “the hidden people” – the elves and trolls many Icelanders firmly believe in.

Wanting to explore the vast and dramatic interior of the island, we hired a 4x4 and headed east along black volcanic roads.

We passed steaming thermal pools before reaching our first destinatio­n, a stylish hotel improbably converted from a former hostel for workers at the nearby geothermal plant

Our next stop was a remote hotel on the Snaefellsn­es peninsular, where we finally witnessed the Northern Lights – our necks ached as we watched all those eerie, pirouettin­g beams moving across the starlit sky.

We couldn’t leave the area without hiking up to the glacier-topped volcano made famous by Jules Verne’s Journey To The Centre

Of The Earth.

Heading further north, we passed fjords and tiny red-roofed hamlets, waterfalls and spectacula­r mountain ranges. Photograph­ing everything, we utterly failed to capture the sheer majesty of the landscape.

Finally, we arrived in Akureyri, Iceland’s second city, and then visited the mind-blowing volcanic Mývatn eutrophic lake reserve.

Akureyri is a pretty, peaceful town with few high-rise buildings but nonetheles­s its location at the head of the Eyjafjörðu­r fjord became the inspiratio­n for Eldísvík – my fictitious, far less harmonious, citystate of the future.

With so much still to see, Iceland has become a favourite holiday destinatio­n.

 ??  ?? ▼ The Aurora Borealis, also known as the Northern Lights, seen above Iceland.
▼ The Aurora Borealis, also known as the Northern Lights, seen above Iceland.
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