“What McGhee has accomplished in this enthralling book is both a canvas of our imaginary Arctic . . . and a history and anthropology of the real thing. . . . We meet heroism, stupidity, greed, smallpox, and Christianity, not to mention a dead narwhal mistaken for a unicorn.”
— John Leonard, Harper's
“In prose infused by his position as curator of Arctic archaeology at the Canadian Museum of Civilization—which has taken him to sites in several countries—McGhee demolishes some persistent illusions about the white North. . . . Evocative.”
— Mark Abley, Times Literary Supplement
"This mix of the anecdotal observation and scholarly argument places McGhee's book comfortably on the boundary between academic and popular history, a beautifully written and well-illustrated volume that is at once informative, entertaining, and difficult to put down. . . . McGhee's work will be of intense interest to students and researchers in the field of northern history, or to the general reader wanting to know more about such topics as Arctic exploration, northern indigenous people, or the Norse colonization of Greenland and North America. . . . A brave and path breaking attempt to situate the Arctic within the broader field of world history, it is also a finely written homage to the people who have inhabited and explored the circumpolar world for centuries."
— John Sandlos, H-Canada
Winner
— Canadian Historical Association 2004 Clio Award for Northern Canadian History
"Superbly written. . . . The Last Imaginary Place is filled with fascinating accounts of fur trading, ivory hunting, native whaling, doomed exploration efforts, and the disorienting terrain that has beguiled and imperiled Europeans from the time of their first access to this remote region. . . . The Last Imaginary Place is as informed and informative as it is engaging and entertaining!"
— Able Greenspan, Midwest Book Review
"Combining archaeology, history and anthropology, The Last Imaginary Place is a history of humans in the Arctic. McGhee also includes some literary history, touching on the place of the Arctic in the imagination and the ways in which this has differed from the reality on the ground, and elements of travel narrative, drawing on his own experiences working on digs...a great read, which I highly recommend to anyone at all curious about the Arctic."
— Danny Yee, Danny Reviews
“McGhee displays the powerful attractions of the top of the world. . . . [His] prose . . . sparkles like frost in the midnight sun.”
— Financial Times
"The myth of the Arctic as an untouched wilderness penetrated only by the most intrepid of adventurers and populated by primitive peoples who had to be tamed along with their wilderness takes a beating in this refreshing primer from McGhee. . . . McGhee's book is an excellent introduction to the Arctic's history, peoples and contemporary political issues."
— Publishers Weekly
"Compelling. . . . McGhee recounts life in Arctic Siberia, Vikings and Arctic farmers, life among the Inuit people, ice and death on the Northeast Passage, gold mining, and the early exploration of Hudson Bay. He believes that the Arctic is not so much a region as a dream—what he sees as a dream of a unique attractive world, the last imaginary place on earth. An archaeologist who spent 30 years there, the author lets his love for the region shine through on every page."
— Booklist
"The Last Imaginary Place is very well written and built on a lifetime of outstanding research. It succeeds in communicating some of the wonders of the Arctic and its extraordinary human history, while making the choices and challenges people have faced familiar and recognizable."
— Susan Kaplan, director, Peary-MacMillan Arctic Museum & Arctic Studies Center, Bowdoin College
"McGhee makes us care about this precious part of the world by putting color, flesh, diversity, and particularity back into a complex history and multifaceted human geography that has often been homogenized and generalized, removed from time and objectified. This is a beautiful book and a fine testimony to McGhee's expert and longstanding love of the Arctic."
— Sherrill Grace, professor of English at the University of British Columbia, author of "Canada and the Idea of North"
"This is an important book by a prominent researcher and highly accomplished author who presents his global Arctic view to readers here for the first time."
— William Fitzhugh, director, Arctic Studies Center, Smithsonian Institution