The Frozen River: Seeking Silence in the Himalaya
By (Author) James Crowden
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
17th February 2021
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Travel writing
951.5057092
Paperback
352
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 22mm
260g
A tour de force of luminous writing. Mark Cocker, Spectator
In 1976 James Crowden left his career in the British army and travelled to Ladakh in the Northern Himalaya, one of the most remote parts of the world. The Frozen River is his extraordinary account of the time he spent there, living alongside the Zangskari people, before the arrival of roads and mass tourism.
James immerses himself in the Zangskari way of life, where meditation and week-long mountain festivals go hand in hand, and silence and solitude are the hallmarks of existence. When butter traders invite James on their journey down the frozen river Leh, he soon realises that this way of living, unchanged for centuries, comes with a very human cost.
In lyrical prose, James captures a crucial moment in time for this Himalayan community. A moment in which their Buddhist practices and traditions are in flux, and the economic pull of a world beyond their valley is increasingly difficult to ignore.
Praise for The Frozen River
The singular virtue of Crowdens prose is to create a sense of enormous immediacy he acts as a transparent lens that gathers all that fierce Zanskari winter light and illuminates the primary colors of both the place and its people. In so doing, he creates a tour de force of luminous writing. Mark Cocker, Spectator
The adventure brings out the best in Crowdens writing, which in full flow has a compelling lyrical energy.
Oliver Balch, TLS
A revelationthe most gripping and fascinating reads I have enjoyed for a very long time.
Martin Hesp, Western Morning News
In prose hard as the frost and gritty as the rocks, James Crowden weathers a Himalayan winter in snow-bound Zanskar and recalls the boundless hospitality and ingenuity of his wind-furrowed hosts. Crowden and Zanskar are a match made on high.
John Keay, author of India: A History
Terrific. Crowden is a meditative swashbuckler: imagine John Buchan, cross-legged in a mountain monastery, smelling of sandalwood incense, or Wordsworth on speed, with a belt jangling with karabiners.
Charles Foster, author of Being a Beast
A luminous book, exquisite in its depiction, profound in its rhymes of ice and mind. As testament to its transporting power, when Id finished it I felt I had spent a winter in Zanskar.
Jay Griffiths, author of Wild
A fascinating, immersive, hair-raising read.
Tim Pears author of In The Place of Fallen Leaves
A wonderful book, otherworldly, full of the ecstasies and revelations of true isolation and hardship. Philip Marsden, author of Rising Ground
through his eyes we glimpse a vanishing world; the nature, people and traditions little changed for hundreds of years a fleeting glimpse of an older way of life Geographical Magazine
James Crowden is an author and poet living in Somerset, England. He is the author of Ciderland (2008) which won the Andre Simon Food and Drink Award in 2008 and visits India whenever he can.