'The central theme is clear and persuasive, the focus on northern landscapes fascinating throughout. Conversations with Landscape offers a consistently excellent set of essays which will be welcomed and widely read by anthropologists, cultural geographers, visual and aesthetic theorists, and, in particular, the wide interdisciplinary community of landscape scholars and students.' John Wylie, University of Exeter, UK 'Collectively the essays of Conversations With Landscape create an innovative landscape of their own, refusing to take landscape and human engagement with it for granted. Indeed, there is much to explore. These are fascinating tales - theoretical, ethnographic, and historical - about the moving landscape. Not only is it forever changing, it touches people in a variety of ways.' GÃsli Pálsson, University of Iceland, Iceland '... unlike the rich and sometimes overwhelming experience of fieldwork for the archaeologist or anthropologist which becomes reduced, hidden or submerged and at times completely lost in the translation to text and final publication; here people's experiences of Iceland are vividly communicated to us, opening up our own expectations. Rather than being objective and detached, here relational experiences are created between observers and their surroundings. Rather than merely defining the experience, we too are taken on the journey.' Australian Archaeology We are deeply indebted to the co-editors, both in the geography department at the University of Iceland, for not only introducing us to this theme with contributions from Nordic (mostly Icelandic) scholars and others interested in circumpolar environments, but also for stimulating the rest of us to explore the subject of conversations in some new lights... I believe that the contents will resonate with members of the several scholarly communities, not just those interested in Nordic landscapes, literature, environmental ethics, human ecology, social theory, and biology but a