4505628
9780802777409
Marq de Villiers andSheila Hirtleare coauthors ofSahara:The Extraordinary History of the World's Largest Desertand several other books on exploration, history, politics, and travel.Sable Island, published in Canada asA Dune Shift, won the twenty-eighth Evelyn Richardson Nonfiction Prize, the longest-running writing award in Canada. De Villiers and Hirtle live in Eagle Head, Nova Scotia. Sable Islandone hundred mile due east of Nova Scotia, in the midst of the worst weather in the North Atlanticis a thirty-mile-long sand dune, uninhabited except by a couple of government agents and by bands of wild horses that have populated the island for more than two hundred years. Yet this small place illuminates grand and global themes, both human and natural. For centuries, Sable terrorized legions of mariners crossing from Europe to Americamore than five hundred ships have been wrecked on its shores, fully ten disasters for every mile of coastline. Sable is constantly moving, its beaches disappearing and reappearing in storms, its very body in slow motion to the east. Because of this, it is a metaphor for the way the planet governs itself, because to appreciate Sable is to understand the workings of the great ocean currents, the winds and the North Atlantic gale, and the forces of entropy. "As delightful to experience in words as it is difficult to experience in actuality . . . inherently compelling."Chicago Sun-Times "As delightful to experience in words as it is difficult to experience in actuality . . . inherently compelling."Chicago Sun-Times "[A] sense of wonder . . . prevails from first page to last . . . A great book."Portland Press Herald(Maine) "The longtime Canadian collaborators outline the natural and chronological history of a 30-mile crescent of peach-colored sand that still eats an occasional ship for supper. Dotted with greenery and wild horses, orchids and Ipswich sparrows, Sable Island is considered one of the great graveyards of the North Atlantic. It sits out there in the ocean's steel-gray roil on the edge of the continental shelf. Who would ever suspect that there would be a shape-shifting island in this vastness, with submerged bars ready to trap and topple a ship? Very few, at least at first, explain the authors in their glinting profile. The island's distant past is as foggy as its summer weather; Basque sailors may have been there, maybe Vikings, perhaps an Irish monk in a coracle. De Villiers and Hirtle provide a sweet little geological history of the place, a child of glacial retreat, and detail the island's special location 'in the center of this vortex, this complex system of currents, gyres, and rings' that give it stability but also may spell its doom by pushing it into the abyssal gully to the east. For such a small scrap of sand, the island has a dogged human history, borne of the rivalry between the French and English. A humane establishment was founded there to aid shipwrecked sailors (brought to life with excerpts from letters, diaries, and news reports) as well as to dump a lunatic or misfit or two. Access is guarded these days to protect the fragile estate and its inhabitantsseals that serve as fodder for the elusive Greenland shark, birds, and feral poniesbut the island remains under threat from energy interests and from nature itself. Another finely etched portrait of a strange, romantic place from this accomplished duo."Kirkus Reviews "Sable Island is a low-lying, 30-mile-long sand dune on the edge of the North American continental shelf southeast of Nova Scotia. It lies right in the middle of a complex set of ocean currents, meteoDe Villiers, Marq is the author of 'Sable Island The Strange Origins And Curious History of a Dune Adrift in the Atlantic' with ISBN 9780802777409 and ISBN 0802777406.
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