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Where The Earth Meets The Sky
  • Published: 21 April 2026
  • ISBN: 9781761357435
  • Imprint: Penguin
  • Format: Trade Paperback
  • Pages: 320
  • RRP: $36.99

Where The Earth Meets The Sky

A study of penguins, people and place in Antarctica




A stunning work of natural history, science, and polar travelogue,Where the Earth Meets the Skyis a chronicle of one conservation biologist’s time in Antarctica, the most isolated place on the planet.

Antarctica is the coldest, windiest and most inaccessible part of our planet—and now one of the places most affected by climate change. In this moving narrative, conservation biologist Louise K. Blight recounts her summer studying Adélie penguins.
On isolated Ross Island, from which legendary explorers Sir Ernest Shackleton and Robert Falcon Scott attempted the South Pole, Louise and pioneering penguin biologist David Ainley document how the region’s penguins are being affected by the world’s largest-ever iceberg. The iceberg’s impact is geological in scope and life-changing for the tens of thousands of breeding penguins rushing to mate and rear their young.

Surrounded by the hypnotic splendour of Antarctica’s landscape, Louise and David record details of penguin courtship, incubation, and chick-rearing against a backdrop of the mental and emotional impacts of extreme weather, ongoing isolation and twenty-four hours of daylight. Interwoven with stories of early explorers and modern-day Antarcticans, Louise poetically conveys the isolation and the endless silence that ultimately allows her to explore the grief that has lingered since the untimely deaths of her father and sister.

Blending polar travelogue, science and natural history, this is a story about a female scientist navigating Antarctica’s extreme conditions and quirky human subculture. It is a story about how the world’s most unforgiving environment has shaped the psyches of Antarctica’s human visitors, past and present—and how nature can heal the human soul.

  • Published: 21 April 2026
  • ISBN: 9781761357435
  • Imprint: Penguin
  • Format: Trade Paperback
  • Pages: 320
  • RRP: $36.99

About the author

Louise K Blight

LOUISE K. BLIGHT is a conservation biologist and an Adjunct Professor at the University of Victoria’s School of Environmental Studies. She has authored more than fifty scientific publications, and serves as the co-chair of the birds specialist group of the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada, the expert national body that assesses threatened species. Louise lives in unceded Coast Salish territory on Salt Spring Island, British Columbia, with her partner Iain, their poodle Poppy, and two indoor cats, Buster Kitten and Toby The Tobes.

Praise for Where The Earth Meets The Sky

An elegant and insightful memoir set in seemingly bleak and featureless Antarctica but made rich and textured through the sharp eyes of Louise Blight. There is serious work being done here—a study of penguins, a study of humans—but also humour, curiosity, and reverence for every creature who spends their days and lives trying to make sense of this beguiling corner of the world.

Harley Rustad

Part love story for the wildest place on earth, part meditation on what we’ve lost, Louise Blight combines a scientist’s clarity and rigour with an artist’s appreciation of landscape and language to create a hauntingly beautiful depiction of her season studying Adélie penguins at a remote Antarctic field station. Where the Earth Meets the Sky gives us brilliantly rendered sketches of people, place and penguins; fascinating, funny, insightful - and occasionally bizarre – details of an isolated, stripped-down life and its effect on those who live it; an ultimately positive personal trajectory; and a powerful testimony to the vital importance of the Ross Sea as the most intact marine ecosystem on earth.

Kate Rawles

A vivid portrait of a harsh and unforgiving landscape, succeeding in making the inhospitable seem inviting. Surrounded only by penguins — and a few lovable curmudgeons — Blight weaves a captivating memoir of a field season spent on the White Continent. Full of scientific curiosity, and equal parts illuminating prose and wry humour, Where the Earth Meets the Sky is a wonderful addition to Antarctica's rich literary history, told from the unique perspective of a wildlife biologist. A heart-tugging requiem for Antarctica's imperiled penguins.

Gloria Dickie

Louise Blight presents an intriguing theatre of emotions, a fascinating world of highs and lows where ice, humans and birds interact. At the centre of this evocative book is a small team of dedicated scientists and their support crew surviving in the cold, snowy, windswept wastes, while studying these amazing and lovable birds. But it is the small community of academics and support crew, isolated at the end of the world, which provides a fascinating mix of harmony and conflict. The wonder, beauty, and tragedy of nature meet human love, fear, and dispute. A fascinating story of the family life of penguins and those who study them.

Brian Hall, author of High Risk