
Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme created by The Broke and the Bookish and now hosted by Jana at That Artsy Reader Girl. For the rules see her blog/
The topic today is Books Set in Snowy Places. These are some of the books I’ve read set in snowy places demonstrating the awesome power and danger to be found in the snow!










- The Shining by Stephen King, set in the Overlook Hotel in the Colorada Rockies with Jack Torrance and his family. The winter weather closes in on the hotel and they are cut off from the rest of the world. Terrible things had taken place at the hotel and as psychic forces gather strength ghosts begin to surface and both Jack and his five year old son, Danny are their target. Terrifying!
- The Corpse in the Snowman by Nicholas Blake. Set in 1940 at Easterham Manor in Essex, where the isolated home of the Restorick family is cut off from the neighbouring village by snow. There’s a death and a body hidden in a snowman that is only discovered when a thaw sets in.
- The Shipping News by Annie Proulx. Set in Newfoundland in its frozen, storm-ridden isolation, surrounded by icebergs “like white prisons” is the old, dilapidated Quoyle family house on Quoyle’s Point that had stood empty for forty-four years, a “gaunt building … lashed with cable to iron rings set in the rock”. Quoyle’s job on the local Newfoundland weekly paper the Gammy Bird is to report on the shipping news, the boats coming in and out of the port and to cover the local car wrecks.
- Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie. Poirot is on the Orient Express, on a three-days journey across Europe. But after midnight the train comes to a halt, stuck in a snowdrift. In the morning the millionaire Simon Ratchett is found dead in his compartment his body stabbed a dozen times and his door locked from the inside. It is obvious from the lack of tracks in the snow that no-one has left the train. So the murderer must be on the train.
- The Mist by Ragnar Jonasson Nordic Noir. Jonasson’s writing brings the scenery and the weather to life – you can feel the isolation and experience what it is like to be lost in a howling snowstorm. The emotional tension is brilliantly done too, the sense of despair, confusion and dread is almost unbearable.
- The Body in the Ice by A J Mackenzie, the 2nd Hardcastle and Chaytor Mystery set in Romney Marsh and the surrounding countryside in 1796-7 when the winter was exceptionally harsh and cold and on Christmas Day a body is found, frozen in a pond. There’s no modern technology, just old-fashioned crime detection and deduction and a certain amount of intuition.
- To the Bright Edge of the World by Eowyn Ivey. The story ofLieutenant Colonel Allen Forrester’s journey in 1885 from Perkins Island up the Wolverine River in Alaska. The Wolverine is the key to opening up Alaska and its rich natural resources to the outside world, but previous attempts have ended in tragedy.
- Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton. As well as striking and memorable characters the setting is beautifully described – a ‘mute and melancholy landscape, an incarceration of frozen woe‘, in the isolated village of Starkfield (a fictional New England village). This is a tragedy but there is light to contrast the darkness, and there is love and hope set against repression and misery.
- The Chalet by Catherine Cooper, a fast-paced murder mystery, set mainly in La Madière, a fictional ski resort in the French Alps. Two young men ski into a blizzard… but only one returns. 20 years later four people connected to the missing man find themselves in that same resort. Each has a secret. Two may have blood on their hands. One is a killer-in-waiting. Someone knows what really happened that day.
- Dark Matter: a Ghost Story by Michelle Paver, set in the High Arctic, where the isolation of the long, dark Arctic winter is oppressive and unrelenting. Set in 1937 when Jack Miller was part of an expedition to study its biology, geology and ice dynamics and to carry out a meteorological survey. Right from the start things begin to go wrong. Jack’s unease turns into dread when is left alone at the camp and his nightmare really begins. This really is a page-turner and a good old-fashioned and seriously scary ghost story!

the Cairngorms – and there was snow in May.
Lower down the snow fell too but didn’t stick. The photo below is of a beautiful little loch in the Glenmore Forest Park, An Lochan Uaine the ‘green lochan’ (although in my photo it looks blue – it was really green!). ‘Lochan’ is Gaelic for ‘ a small loch, or lake’.
The green shows up more in this photo:







