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Uprising: Walking the Southern Alps of New Zealand

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Uprising: Walking the Southern Alps of New Zealand

Contributors:

By (Author) Nic Low

ISBN:

9781925355284

Publisher:

Text Publishing

Imprint:

The Text Publishing Company

Publication Date:

2nd July 2021

Country:

Australia

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Indigenous peoples
Social and cultural anthropology

Dewey:

796.5109937

Prizes:

Winner of Special Wily Prize for Canterbury region, New Zealand Society of Authors Heritage Book Awards 2022 (New Zealand)

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

368

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 285mm, Spine 40mm

Weight:

522g

Description

A riveting blend of nature writing, indigenous storytelling and great adventure in the NZ alps This book is about walking as a form of knowing. Armed with Ngai Tahu's ancient oral maps and modern satellite atlas, I crossed the Southern Alps more than a dozen times, trying to understand how our forebears saw the land. What did it mean to define your identity by sacred mountains, or actually see them as ancestors, turned to stone Raised in the shadow of New Zealand's Southern Alps, Nic Low grew up on stories of mountain exploration from his family's European side. Years later, a vision of the alps in a bank of storm clouds sparked his return home, and a decade-long obsession with comprehending how his Maori ancestors knew that same terrain. Ka Tiritiri o te Moana, the alps, form the backbone of the Ngai Tahu tribe's territory- five hundred kilometres of mountains and glaciers, rivers and forests. Far from being virgin wilderness, the area was named and owned long before Europeans arrived and the struggle for control of the land began. Low talked with tribal leaders, dived into the archives and an astonishing family memoir, and took what he learned for a walk. Part gripping adventure story, part meditation on history and place, Uprising recounts his alpine expeditions to unlock the stories living in the land. What does it mean to transport pounamu, greenstone, across three hundred kilometres of rivers and ranges for the first time in almost two centuries How does it feel to climb the sacred peak Aoraki / Mt Cook, then deliberately turn back before the top And if you ignore traditional omens and try to cross the Main Divide in the dead of winter, should you expect to survive Uprising brings a staunchly indigenous perspective to the walking tradition of writers like Robert Macfarlane. It is an invitation to travel one of the world's most spectacular landscapes in the footsteps of Maori explorers, raiding parties, and gods.

Reviews

'[Nic Low] is a very endearing storyteller and an earnest storyteller as wellIts such a pleasure to read. * Loose Reads, 95b FM *
'A narrative of multiple crossings of K Tiritiri-o-te-moana, the South Islands Main Divide, Uprising is a song to the mountains, rivers, glaciers, coasts, skies, weather and moreIt is a meditation that intensifies as the book unfolds. And it is deeply personal. * Kete *
'This really is an outstanding book, and one that anyone who likes to wander through the South Island back-country, or who has an interest in the history of that area, needs to read. For many, it will enable the hills to be viewed with a new lens. * Otago Daily Times *
[A] great readUprising will join the New Zealand canon or blow past it, but whichever, itll make an impact[It] treads the line between trauma and humour, fact and speculative fiction, between Pakeha and Maori and between two languagesLets consign this book to a natural progression into myth. That it cast the same strange light Keri Hulme once saw over this shining land. That it was called in by the mountains themselves, who yanked a storyteller out of a land full of dust and flies and set him to work on a story wrought from mist and snow. Because it was time. And that he used, with great skill, English words alongside te reo to measure the reach and fetch of the old land. * NZ Listener *
Theres a bristling, playful energy to Nic Lows writingthe narrative fairly pulses along at a cracking pace with unexpected detours. * Age on Arms Race *
[Lows] writing is fierce and uncompromising, bringing contemporary anxieties to the surfaceThis collection fights and grapples with language, counter-culture and consumerism, the characters inhabiting a plastic-elastic world being reshaped in the mould of whoever gets to the gold firstSeductive and frightening. * Weekend Australian on Arms Race *
Uprising is a revelationcarefully researched, well-written, makes dozens of astute observationsand takes New Zealand mountaineering literature to somewhere new and overdue. * NZ Alpine Club *
'Low delicately meanders across multiple spaces which cannot be mapped in any obvious way, across culture, history, spirituality and colonization[He] reveals his vulnerability with astounding honesty. * Timmah Ball, Sydney Review of Books *
A lyrical exploration of alpine trails, history and memory that brilliantly treads the line between trauma and humour, fact and fiction, and Mori and Pkeh worlds. * Listener (Best books of 2021) *
'Nic Low invites us to experience a Mari understanding of language, land, and history. The book provides both a comfort read and education. * Tony Birch, ABR Books of the Year 2021 *

Author Bio

Nic Low is a writer of Ngai Tahu and European descent who divides his time between Melbourne and Christchurch. His writing on wilderness, technology and race has been widely published and anthologised on both sides of the Tasman. His first book was Arms Race, a collection of speculative fictions shortlisted for the Readings and Steele Rudd prizes, and named a New Zealand Listener and Australian Book Review book of the year.

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