How to get it: • Official site → purchase/download • Library e‑loan (OverDrive, Bibliotheca) • Academic repo (pre‑print, check version) • Ebook stores (Kindle, Kobo)

Study ideas: • Two‑column map vs. poem table. • GIS overlay of latitude/longitude. • Comparative essay on symbolism. • Personal journal after each pair.

Further reading: • “Winter Cartography” (JHG, 2023) • “The Poetry of Snow” (Llorens, 2022) • QGIS “Importing Historical Maps” (video) • Coursera: Arctic Indigenous Folklore • “Climate Change & Visual Arts” (2024 catalogue) Cartes d’Hivern is as much a visual journey as a literary one. By combining careful navigation of the PDF, thoughtful annotation, and cross‑disciplinary research, you can turn a simple winter reading experience into a rich, scholarly (or simply contemplative) project. Enjoy the maps, savor the verses, and let the cold inspire both your imagination and your intellect. Happy reading!