While there’s still snow

This long poem, by Whittier (1807-1892) a poet based in northeast Massachusetts,  a Quaker and an abolitionist, once was required reading for kids.

This long poem, by Whittier (1807-1892) a poet based in northeast Massachusetts, a Quaker and an abolitionist, once was required reading for kids.

Adapted from Robert Whitcomb’s “Digital Diary,’’ in GoLocal24.com

Providence-based architectural writer and historian William Morgan’s latest – and beautifully illustrated -- book, Snowbound: Dwelling in Winter (Princeton Architectural Press), looks at 20 houses in various cold parts of the world, including Europe, Asia and North and South America.

A New Hampshire house and a Connecticut house are featured in the book.

As the press release notes:

“From the ski slopes of Utah to the frigid tundra of northwestern Russia, Snowbound celebrates contemporary design in cold climates with a focus on sustainability. Tailor-made for architects, designers, snowbirds, and aspiring second-home owners, this tour of twenty dwellings is equal parts escapist photo essay and practical sourcebook, with immersive photography, architectural plans, and location, climate, and building-systems data.’’

That some of these houses were put up in preposterously harsh and remote places adds to the entertainment.

But global warming rears its head. Mr. Morgan writes:

“Candidates for Snowbound in Canada, Australia, and Vermont had to be eliminated as recent winters came with less-than-usual snowfall. In the middle of the winter in the Southern Hemisphere, there was insufficient snow in the Andes, more than a thousand miles south of Buenos Aires, to photograph a house as it would have looked only less than a decade ago.’’

But what about summers at these buildings?