"Her descriptions of the natural world are arresting, and powerfully convey her conviction that ''how to be cold'' means ''how to live.''" -- The New Yorker "As a storyteller and a stylist, Braverman is remarkably skilled, with a keen sense of visceral detail that borders on sublime. Her ability to draw readers into heart-pounding action sequences is what makes the book so courageous and original as a travel narrative and a memoir of self-discovery." -- New York Times Book Review "Remarkable. It''s amazing to watch as she develops backbone and grit, determined not to let anyone or anything stand between her and the icy landscape she loves so much." -- Entertainment Weekly "This summer, readers have their pick of female narrators traversing both internal and external terrain. But few stand out as much as Blair Braverman''s Arctic memoir, Welcome to the Goddamn Ice Cube." -- Outside "Braverman left her California home at 18 to learn dog sledding in Norway.
As she chronicles in this bold adventure memoir, she''s returned again and again to the coldest places on earth in search of a fearlessness frequently off-limits to women." -- O Magazine "An enchanting memoir of exploration and adventure, self-discovery and self-doubt. Ice Cube hugs everything tight, turning experiences exotic and fearsome into moments tenderly funny and pure." -- Buzzfeed ". a richly insightful work whose bold but delicately delivered honesty has much to teach us. Welcome to the Goddamn Ice Cube is gorgeous, moving and universally resonant. Most of all, it''s important." -- Huffington Post "A thoughtful meditation on a lifelong attraction to the cold.
" -- Boston Globe "a lyrical, understated writer. [an] unusual memoir [that] will resonate with anyone who has ever chased a dream through a thicket of difficulty." -- Minneapolis Star Tribune "Blair Braverman confronts hostility and harassment in her memoir of adventure in the wilderness." -- The New Republic "Stunning. We feel, acutely, the moments and images Braverman shares with us, but we also take in the years of perspective, of carefully honed wisdom, that she brings to them. Braverman''s descriptions are stippled with terror and beauty." -- Bitch "Hilarious and heart-wrenching." -- Dallas Morning News "This book could be described in a dozen different ways, but no description would get at root of this book, which is about gender and violence and belonging, but most of all about being human and learning to live--and trust oneself--in world where things aren''t always safe.
" -- Brevity Magazine "In a new book, Blair Braverman describes a life spent obsessed with the frozen north, and the sexual violence she encountered in that male" -- The Guardian "Compulsively readable. Braverman''s debut beautifully portrays what it''s like to be a woman in an unwelcoming climate." -- Electric Literature "An award for straightforward storytelling should be named after [Braverman]. a fascinating read. a strange, remarkable memoir." -- AV Club "[Blair''s] external experiences are extraordinary, but it''s what happens internally that both sets this memoir apart and gives it universal resonance. Indelible characters, adventurous spirit, and acute psychological insight combine in this multilayered debut." -- Kirkus (Starred Review) "Her easy, lyrical prose makes this search for identity and self a worthwhile read.
" -- Publishers Weekly "Readers will likely find that "ice cubes" are not the point, but rather the risky choices made while growing up and the struggles faced along the way." -- Booklist "The next must-read for those who were fans of Cheryl Strayed''s Wild and for those with a daring spirit or those hoping to have more of one." -- Green Bay Gazette "Stunning. Braverman exposes all of her desires, insecurities and triumphs in a compulsively readable tangle of raw nerves, brutal honesty, and biting wit. She allows room for not just her inner strength, but her doubts and fears, striking a balance that brings her story into vivid focus." -- The Maine Edge "The best work of non-fiction I''ve read in 2016, Welcome to the Goddamn Ice Cube is this year''s H is For Hawk ." -- Library Bound "If finishing Wild left a hole in your heart, we''re willing to bet that Welcome to the Goddamn Ice Cube might be just the thing." -- Bookish "A delicate meditation from the frontiers of feminism, forged by the stark landscapes that prompted it.
Braverman is a highly original talent." -- Adrian Nicole LeBlanc, author of Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble, and Coming of Age in the Bronx "Braverman has written a brilliant troubling of travel writing, of the exotic and the familiar and even of the self that survives to tell the tale. An astonishing debut." -- Jeff Sharlet, author of The Family "Like a 21st-century feminist reincarnation of Jack London, Braverman has crafted an eloquent and gripping tale of self-knowledge that leads through communion with ice and sea, dogs and sleds, and finds her, finally, at home amid the complex kindness of other human beings." -- Sara Marcus, author of Girls to the Front "Blair Braverman writes beautifully and baldly about the struggle to trust ourselves, especially as we''re undermined by those who hope we won''t. Braverman will stun you with the incredible events of her young life and her fierce courage." -- Mac McClelland, author of Irritable Hearts "An extraordinary debut, Ice Cube takes us to the coldest place on earth only to reveal its author''s warm, witty, invincible heart." -- Jennifer Finney Boylan, author of She''s Not There and Stuck in the Middle With You "Blair Braverman has a poet''s heart.
She keeps it in a rawhide pouch on her dogsled. Tough, bracing, visionary and epic, her book also manages to be tender and beautiful. You must read it." -- Luis Alberto Urrea, author of The Devil''s Highway "A gripping coming-of-age memoir. Braverman captures brilliantly the challenges and ecstasies of life as a young woman in the frigid, male-dominated worlds of Norway and Alaska. A wonderful book about deep friendships--with humans, dogs and the icy north itself." -- Rob Nixon, author of Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor.