Writer/naturalist Elizabeth Bradfield is the author of
the poetry collections Once Removed, Approaching
Ice, Interpretive Work, and Toward Antarctica. Her
poems and essays have appeared in The New Yorker, West Branch,
Poetry, The Atlantic Monthly, Orion and elsewhere. Winner
of the Audre Lorde Prize from the Publishing Triangle, finalist for
a Lambda Literary Award, and the James Laughlin Award from the
Academy of American Poets, her awards also include a Stegner
Fellowship, a Bread Loaf Scholarship, and a residency at the
Vermont Studio Center. Bradfield grew up in Tacoma, Washington,
attended the University of Oregon, graduated from the University of
Washington, and received her MFA from the University of Alaska,
Anchorage. Founder and editor-in-chief of Broadsided Press and a
contributing editor at the Alaska Quarterly Review, she lives
on Cape Cod with her partner, works as a naturalist/guide locally
as well as on expedition ships around the globe, and is Associate
Professor and co-director of creative writing at Brandeis
University.
www.ebradfield.com
"Reading Elizabeth Bradfield’s Toward Antarctica is like having a
poet’s behind-the-scenes tour of a natural history museum. Through
her expert eyes, the exquisite landscape and wildlife come into
vivid view; so does the gutsy work and responsibility of being a
naturalist guide. Inspired by Japanese haibun form, the book pairs
the lyric intensity of poetry with the fragmented, staccato prose
of a mind trying to keep track of the flood of experience.
Bradfield’s gorgeous photographs add yet another dimension of
aesthetic experience. Her work is a resonant exploration of
bringing art and science together to sing a mindful
duet." —Alison Hawthorne Deming, author of Zoologies: On
Animals and the Human Spirit and Stairway to Heaven; Chair of
Environment and Social Justice at the University of Arizona,
founder of the Field Studies in Writing Program
"Toward Antarctica is a travelogue, a meditation, a photo-essay, a
documentary poem, an ode, and an elegy. It is a work of eco- and
cultural criticism, personal essay, history, and photojournalism.
Like the poem-prose hybrid haibun form, which provides the
structural basis for this book, Toward Antarctica moves between
different genres and literary forms, challenging our notion of what
a travel narrative can and should be. The best writers understand
that all works of literature are hybrids at heart, and Elizabeth
Bradfield pushes the limits of what we imagine poetry can do,
capturing her time in Antarctica in lush, yet always tightly
controlled images that throb with musical life. With a
photographer’s eye and a naturalist’s sense of the world, Bradfield
shows us life in Antarctica to be a strange, magical, occasionally
lethal mixture of the human and the animal, a place that exists as
much in our romantic imaginations as it does in the world itself,
an environment that continues to evade our comprehension even as it
remains subject to our human impact. Bradfield’s epic poem-memoir
shows us that Antarctica is the continent to which we are ever
traveling, upon whose shores we never truly arrive." —Paisley
Rekdal, author of Imaginary Vessels and Intimate: An American
Family Photo Album
"So many of us hunger for Antarctica. For its promise of something
so notably new to our experience, pristine. Though very little is
wholly pristine on this planet, very little is free of our
'fantastic, greasy hope.' It seems fitting that in her deep and
thoughtful journey to the site of so many voyagers’ ambitions
Elizabeth Bradfield would turn to the form Bashō found so useful
for his own Narrow Road to the Interior. A naturalist, poet, and
photographer, Bradfield is as keen-eyed about the continent and its
surrounding islands as she is about the souls counted present on
the ship that takes them there. This balance between expansive
views and focused clarity make reading Toward Antarctica almost as
good as sailing there ourselves." —Camille T. Dungy, author of
Trophic Cascade and editor of Black Nature: Four Centuries of
African American Nature Poetry
"Modern expedition ships sail south to Antarctica every year,
carrying continent-baggers and bucket-listers who drink a toast to
Shackleton, pat themselves on the back, and heroically claim, “We
made it!” It takes a poet, and a darn good one, “to at once be
there and to not even come close.” This is Elizabeth Bradfield
writing to the truth in what she calls, “crepuscular moments of
poetry . . . Here on this unbridled ocean. Here on this world unto
itself.” Having been to Antarctica many times, and studied its
literature, I found this book an artful standout from the crowd,
one garnished with reflection and rust, humor and humility,
sincerity, and respect." —Kim Heacox, author of Antarctica:
The Last Continent, Jimmy Bluefeather, and The Only Kayak
"Toward Antarctica is the most original piece of travel writing
about the Antarctic region I have read in years, combining the
emotional honesty, immediacy, and telegraphic brevity of the diary
with the literary control and imagistic precision of a fine poet.
Through both her photographs and her writing, Bradfield challenges
the clichés of the conventional Antarctic journey narrative while
conveying a profound appreciation of the region’s natural
environment and human history. Well-informed but uninterested in
asserting priority or authority, lyrical but never overblown,
Bradfield is a literary tour guide in the best
sense." —Elizabeth Leane, Antarctic scholar and literary
critic, author of Antarctica in Fiction: Imaginative Narratives of
the Far South
"Her most recent book, Toward Antarctica, is a buoyant and nuanced
collection that rewards the reader who stands at its bow and pays
attention." —Christine Byl, Women's Review of Books
"I enjoyed Elizabeth Bradfield's words and images from the Big
White. Hers is an unusual approach, and one that is to be welcomed
in the still small canon of artistic responses to the
Antarctic—particularly by women. I wholeheartedly recommend this
special book." —Sara Wheeler, author of Terra Incognita and
The Magnetic North
"...an insider’s love letter to one of the world’s most iconic wild
places, and I found it unique, moving and brilliantly
informative."—Marjorie Lewis-Jones, South Sydney Herald
"Thanks to Bradfield’s diverse skills as poet, photographer, and
naturalist, we gain unique vantage to the elusive continent as she
gives us not just an adventure epic but a revealing, complex
meditation, a portrait of the “lost continent” that is elegiac,
wide-ranging, and intimate."—Holly J. Hughes, Terrain.org
"In circling feeling, and in naming the longed-for world from so
many angles, Bradfield offers us a way into the full, messy
richness of our hunger to belong."—Tess Taylor, Orion Magazine
"...Elizabeth Bradfield’s Toward Antarctica (Boreal Books, 2019)
also belongs in the hands of anyone still seeking a renewed
appreciation for the grandeur of the natural world."—Emma
Winters, America Magazine
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