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Fall books preview: 62 books to get ready for the cozy season

Clear your nightstands for autumn’s best reads, including fiction from Canadian stars Waubgeshig Rice and Mona Awad, and non-fiction tales of political intrigue and tech gone awry

Lockdown on ice | Review of Madhouse at the End of the Earth

Print this article No one, it’s safe to say, ever took up polar exploration in search of a good time. To trudge through its annals is to confront a decidedly un-hygge variety of experiences. Just look at the titles: Alone on the Ice. In the Land of White Death. The Last Place on Earth. The Worst Journey in the World.  The Man Who Ate His Boots. It can’t have been easy to outdo these for lurid horror, but Julian Sancton may have succeeded with Madhouse at the End of the Earth: The Belgica’s Journey Into the Dark Antarctic Night. It evokes one of the most frightening hazards of the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration: the isolation, confinement, and tedium of overwintering in an icebound vessel.

Lockdown on ice

Lockdown on ice Stefan Beck © Provided by Washington Examiner LA.Books.LockdownIce.jpg No one, it’s safe to say, ever took up polar exploration in search of a good time. To trudge through its annals is to confront a decidedly un-hygge variety of experiences. Just look at the titles: Alone on the Ice. In the Land of White Death. The Last Place on Earth. The Worst Journey in the World.  The Man Who Ate His Boots. It can’t have been easy to outdo these for lurid horror, but Julian Sancton may have succeeded with Madhouse at the End of the Earth: The Belgica’s

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