The book's real power comes from Tallack's poet's eye. -- New York Times Book Review
A memoir remarkable for its intimacy, wisdom, and radiant prose. Tallack renders descriptions of his emotional landscape as delicately as his painterly descriptions of the physical world. An enthralling meditation on place. -- Kirkus Reviews
Delves into the local culture, dispelling myths and seeking common bonds. The history is captivating and adds context to each place visited. This book balances history, travel, and culture on an interesting path around the world. -- Library Journal
A promising debut from the new school of travel writing examines the significance of place and what it means to belong. This is a book about belonging. Tallack is one of a burgeoning group of young travel writers who have reinvigorated the genre with elements of psychogeography: the study of how places make us feel. -- Will Self - The Guardian
A graceful account of northern peoples' relationship to their environment, and a thoughtful consideration on the meaning of home. -- Winnipeg Free Press
A new kind of travel writing that emphasizes and explores the relationship between people and place. -- Providence Journal
A remarkable survey of cultures, climates and histories. [Tallack's] writing is thoughtfully composed, beautiful and often surprising. An extended meditation on longing and belonging, on personal ties to place and on the particular nature of a certain band of earth and sea. -- Shelf Awareness
Malachy Tallack is the real deal, a writer given over to pure curiosity, honest witness and that most precious of gifts, an unselfconscious sense of wonder. Not just a vibrant new voice, but a wise, questioning and highly sophisticated talent. -- John Burnside, author of 'Waking Up in Toytown: A Memoir'
It is a brave book...and a beautiful book. -- Robert Macfarlane, author of 'The Old Ways: A Journey on Foot'
Throughout his travels, Tallack beautifully sketches a sort of emotional geography of place, a yearning to connect with communities and landscapes. -- Dallas Morning News
Elegant, meditative, and wry. Tallack takes the reader on some fascinating excursions. -- Gavin Francis, author of 'True North: Travels in Arctic Europe'
A subtle, thoughtful study of life on the sixtieth parallel. Highly enjoyable. -- The Financial Times
Although Sixty Degrees North is a book about a journey, and a very personal journey at that, it is one which provokes in the reader their own internal discussion about place, attachment, and what it means to be home. -- Elsewhere Journal