DECEMBER 2015
Ruth Slavid (text), James Morris (photographs)
Ice Station: The Creation of Halley VI
Britain‘s Pioneering Antarctic Research Station
Park Books, 2015
DEAR FRIEND OF 8 BOOKS A YEAR,
While thinking about this book’s introduction, I saw a lot of options:
- Nearing winter and upcoming cold (Berlin changes when that happens: believe me, it's like living in a whole different city)
- My embarrassing difficulties in correctly remembering whether the Antarctic is in the north or in the south …
- ”I spy with my little eye, something blue and red”
- The discovery of a hole in the ozone layer in 1985 (p. 76)
- Paris, still in a state of shock, now hosting the UN Conference on Climate Change, which some experts think might eventually be called ”mankind's most important event ever”
- The inspiring success story of a relatively unexperienced architect who started by building a ”Girl Guides headquarters”
- A house on skis – how weird is that??
- The challenge of living in total darkness for 106 days (p. 13)
- My surprise at hearing the term ”Antarctic Architecture” (p. 89)
- The tip to flip back and forth between pages 15 and 10
- The insight that sometimes it can be an option not to choose between different options
- Another insight that I should do that only once
All my best,
Christian Kaspar Schwarm
Ruth Slavid (text), James Morris (photographs)
Ice Station: The Creation of Halley VI
Britain‘s Pioneering Antarctic Research Station
Park Books, 2015
Read InscriptionDEAR FRIEND OF 8 BOOKS A YEAR,
While thinking about this book’s introduction, I saw a lot of options:
- Nearing winter and upcoming cold (Berlin changes when that happens: believe me, it's like living in a whole different city)
- My embarrassing difficulties in correctly remembering whether the Antarctic is in the north or in the south …
- ”I spy with my little eye, something blue and red”
- The discovery of a hole in the ozone layer in 1985 (p. 76)
- Paris, still in a state of shock, now hosting the UN Conference on Climate Change, which some experts think might eventually be called ”mankind's most important event ever”
- The inspiring success story of a relatively unexperienced architect who started by building a ”Girl Guides headquarters”
- A house on skis – how weird is that??
- The challenge of living in total darkness for 106 days (p. 13)
- My surprise at hearing the term ”Antarctic Architecture” (p. 89)
- The tip to flip back and forth between pages 15 and 10
- The insight that sometimes it can be an option not to choose between different options
- Another insight that I should do that only once
All my best,
Christian Kaspar Schwarm