Mars on Earth: Wanderings in the Worlds Driest Desert
By (Author) Mark Johanson
Rocky Mountain Books
Rocky Mountain Books
15th January 2025
Canada
General
Non Fiction
Ethnic groups and multicultural studies
LGBTQ+ Studies / topics
Rural communities
Social and cultural anthropology
Places and peoples: general and pictorial works
Travel writing
B
Hardback
304
Width 139mm, Height 215mm
An utterly unique travel memoir about a gay expat searching an otherworldly place for a deeper understanding of his partner and his adoptive homeland.
Embark on an extraordinary odyssey through the heart of the world's driest non-polar desertthe Atacama. In Mars on Earth, intrepid journalist Mark Johanson navigates this otherworldly terrain, a sliver of camel-colored hills, windswept dunes, and desolate salt flats nestled between the Pacific's tumultuous waves and the towering Andes. Unfolding against the backdrop of Chile's 2019-2020 protests, Mark's journey begins in Santiago, unraveling a rich tapestry of human resilience and passion that fuels a nation's desire for change.
As he traverses 1,200 miles of alien landscapes, Mark climbs to the Andean Altiplano's dizzying heights, explores the Pacific's kelp forests, and ventures onto a lithium-rich salt flat threatened by progress. The narrative reaches new heights as Mark delves into the heart of the Atacama, meeting captivating charactersa guardian of ancient mummies, a guru in a glass box, and a copper miner who defied nature's grasp for 69 days. At its core, Mars on Earth weaves a rich tapestry of voices, highlighting the stories of Chile's marginalized communities, including the working class, Indigenous peoples, LGBTQ+ individuals, and immigrant communities from Venezuela and Haiti. Each narrative contributes to the social movement that could redefine the nation's future. This vibrant and adventurous work of narrative nonfiction is a captivating exploration of a land both barren and brimming with life.
Mark Johanson is a seasoned freelance journalist who has lived on four continents before settling in Santiago, Chile, in 2014. His stories about travel, food, culture, and sustainability have appeared in distinguished publications including Travel + Leisure, National Geographic, Conde Nast Traveler, AFAR, Newsweek, GQ, Food & Wine, Bon Apptit, Men's Journal, Backpacker, The Economist, The Guardian, The Sunday Times, Bloomberg, Christie's, BBC Magazine, CNN, Vox, Narratively, and others. He has co-authored a dozen Lonely Planet travel guidebooks to destinations across the Americas and Southeast Asia, including Bolivia, Cambodia, The Caribbean, Chile, Indonesia, Laos, Peru, and the United States. He has similarly co-authored several coffee table books for the iconic travel brand. Learn more at www.markjohanson.com.