Hello welcome to my stop on the blog tour for 50 Words for Snow by Nancy Campbell. Thanks so much to Alison Menzies of Elliott & Thompson for the invite and for my lovely copy. Before I share my review here’s what the book is all about:
“Every language has its own words for the feather-like flakes that come from the sky. In Japanese we find Yuki-onna – a ‘snow woman’ who drifts through the frosted land. In Icelandic falls Hundslappadrifa – ‘big as a dog’s paw’. And in Maori we meet Huka-rere – ‘one of the children of rain and wind’. From mountain tops and frozen seas to city parks and desert hills, writer and Arctic traveller Nancy Campbell digs deep into the meanings of fifty words for snow. Under her gaze, each of these linguistic snow crystals offers a whole world of myth and story. “
Available from: Bookshop.org (affiliate) – Hive – Waterstones – Amazon
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My Review
I love snow, but because I’ve always lived in Jersey in the Channel Islands, the most southerly part of the British Isles, it rarely snows. However, when it does snow I’m like a little kid and can’t wait to get out in it!
I’ve learnt so many new words and phrases from around the world, whilst dipping in and out of this collection. Some of my favourite discoveries are:
Yuki-onna the Japanese word for snow woman.
Kunstschnee, the German word for artistic snow which has a whole industry built around it.
Cheotnum, the Korean word for first snow and the romance attributed to it.
Xue qui the Chinese for snowball, that includes a wonderful anecdote about Robert Capa the famous photographer.
I could go on, but I don’t want to spoil it for you. It’s such a beautiful book, just look at that cover and the end pages inside are the same!
I definitely think it would make a wonderful Christmas present for the non-fiction lover in your life.
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About The Author
Nancy Campbell is an award-winning writer, described as ‘deft, dangerous and dazzling’ by the former Poet Laureate, Carol Ann Duffy and whose writing has been inspired by the polar regions. Her travels in the Arctic resulted in several projects responding to the environment; The Library of Ice: Readings in a Cold Climate was longlisted for the Rathbones Folio Prize 2019; Disko Bay, shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best First Collection 2016 and How to Say ‘I Love You’ in Greenlandic received the Birgit Skiöld Award 2015. In In 2020 she was the recipient of the Royal Geographical Society’s Ness Award for her published work on the polar regions. She is currently a Literature Fellow at Internationales Künstlerhaus Villa Concordia in Germany.
Follow Nancy via her website and Twitter
Lovely gift idea! 😍
Yes I really think so Carol! 😀
Hummm…I can’t find it on Amazon us 😩
Ah no what about the book depository?
Yes…I’ll try! I was just going to add it to a post tonight and use an affiliate link! I do have it in mind for Christmas too!
That’s fantastic thanks Carol! 😀
I once spent two days stuck in the Hotel de France on one of my work trips to Jersey as it had snowed and I couldn’t get off island! It was possibly the last time it snowed there! X
I might have been 2013, the biggest snowfall for 39 years! It was wonderful, for me! x
Yes! That would be about right. I was still working in Jersey then. I bet you enjoyed it! X⛄️❄️
Loved it! we were snowed in and it was wonderful. I got some lovely photos too as it was like a winter wonderland in St. Ouen! x
I bet!
Ooo… I love books like this! Thanks for highlighting; it looks like a beauty.
It’s really lovely! 😀
Lovely, lovely review Nicki💜
Thanks so much Jo 💜
lovely review and even lovelier cover!!! This might need to be added to my collection haha! x
Thanks that’s brilliant 😀 x
Fab review, Nicki – this sounds as wonderful as it looks!
Thanks Jo it rather lovely! x
Lovely review! Sounds like it would make a wonderful gift ❤️
Thanks Rae I think it would! 😀
Oh wow this sounds brilliant! Fab review. xx
Thanks! xx
Looks and sounds like a beautiful book! Glad you learned so much with it. As for snow… I can assure you that I’ve known a lot if up here in Canada and that I only look forward to being warm with a hot drink during those snow/cold days! 😀
Thanks Lashaan I imagine you could probably write a book about snow yourself. Or maybe a graphic novel! 😉