Norðurfari; or, Rambles in Iceland by Pliny Miles

(6 User reviews)   1381
By Susan Romano Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - The Closed Shelf
Miles, Pliny, 1818-1865 Miles, Pliny, 1818-1865
English
Ever wonder what it’s like to travel to Iceland in the 1800s, when the roads were bumpy trails, volcanoes were real mysteries, and dinner mostly involved dried fish? Pliny Miles takes us on a real-life adventure that’s part travel diary, part history lesson, and all curiosity. The so-called 'Rambles' start simple—a man wanting to see Europe quickly—but turn into a race against Iceland’s brutal weather and rocky paths. The big question: Could a 'modern' traveler survive such wild landscapes alone? Miles risks horses that almost slip off glaciers and rude guesthouses that sometimes lose him in the dark. Between boiling hot springs and one eerie volcano he calls the “burning gate of hell,” you really wonder if our hero will make it home. This isn't just a travel log; it's a battle between old ways and a lonely American wanting to witness the earth's raw secrets. Great for anyone who loves true stories with a bit of legend and a lot of grit.
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The Story

Okay, imagine hopping on a ship from New York in the 1800s with no cell service, no TripAdvisor, and only a few horse-drawn carts waiting for you. That’s pretty much Norðurfari; or, Rambles in Iceland. Pliny Miles – yes, his real name – decides to take a crazy side-trip to Iceland for a quick look. But once he lands, he quickly learns: Iceland doesn’t have fancy coaches.

This book tracks his wild rides: using common horses called ness-best (scruffy little ponies), dodging icy rivers, skating across volcanic ash, sleeping in basic homes where families literally live and eat with their cattle. There's humor when he tries sour cheese: something turns his stomach instantly. Also, one night his guide admits he seems lost after dark near sweeping glaciers!

But then things get serious. He visits the famous Geyser and trickles into crevasses–not forgetting death-defying climbs around the Hekla volcano, even getting close to the hellish steam clouds. Details about building small puny shelters, forced resting stops in pure rain – this story is beat slower than any airplane ride.

Why You Should Read It

Usually old travel books read like stiff boring long letters to Uncle Bob. But Miles feels just like a friend laughing at his own struggles. His shock when the house cat sleeps off mice perfectly shows a country unimpressed by foreign convenience. Honestly, his biggest triumph – setting wet clothes by chimney holes without burning them alive – endears him hugely.

But beyond humor, it depicts a lonely island rejecting European updates, staying strong in brutal nature. That shines sincerely: you nearly feel cold while reading. Or how something as weird as a custom to celebrate Saint Olaf’s night means local strangers suddenly break mead singing stories for hours. Adventure aside, he finds Iceland home to amazing pride of hard people pushing through bad harvest seasons and danger just to live. He respects them very much.

Plus it includes shocking stuff: like how one church service let someone announce “I am look for wife currently” in congregation without anyone blushing.

Final Verdict

If you collect random Victorian travel nicknacks or crave challenge stories missing fancy clothes staying scrubbed neat, grab this thing. Backpackers today see tent comfort but they stand knowing very low luxury with Miles outriding axes and dangerous black smoke turning soon his jacket thick with grit. And main reason this ancient travel really surprising: world nature unchanged there mostly pure than modern online false Iceland style expectations but still almost bare exact passionate— will make appreciate emergency scented souvenirs tiny snacks even if local tavern happy give nothing hot save but spare many nice blessing this legendary untouched half-fire-half-ice old pure real land still stays live basically same although villages changed while hearts tough full miracle stronger feelings only joy upon remaining full!

Perfect for: geology longing time exploring actual eruption chaos, Victorian travel memoir friends, fan stories nobody obvious victorious except comfortable seeing huge bleak beautiful spaces slow pace then longing at reindeer visit even impossible mountains soar far off showing greatest surprising final character impossible strongest aftertaste, nature firm heaven stayers. Skip if want big villain moment – only secret struggle lone traveler beating stuck tough spaces proud finally find Iceland enough precious stand here inside writer simple long ago wonderful extremely classic you simply cannot miss chapter name Iceland forerally ever.



🏛️ Public Domain Notice

This masterpiece is free from copyright limitations. You do not need permission to reproduce this work.

Barbara Williams
1 month ago

I appreciate how this edition approaches the core problem, the chapter on advanced strategies offers insights I haven't seen elsewhere. A perfect balance of theory and practical advice.

John Jones
6 months ago

The clarity of the concluding remarks is very professional.

David Lopez
2 years ago

I found the author's tone to be very professional yet accessible, the formatting on mobile devices is surprisingly crisp and clear. I’ll definitely be revisiting some of these chapters again soon.

Charles Martin
4 months ago

I started reading this with a critical mind, the evidence-based approach makes it a very credible source of information. This should be on the reading list of every serious professional.

Margaret Moore
1 year ago

It’s refreshing to see such a high standard of digital publishing.

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5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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