You'd have to travel to the island of Kulusuk - off the coast of Greenland, just south of the Arctic Circle - to see the view from this cabin for real.
Neatly perched on a rocky outcrop, with ice floating by, it is a prime example of something that might inspire cabin envy.
Put together by journalist Steven Leckart and web entrepreneur Zach Klein, the Cabin Porn book was inspired by the forest community of Beaver Brook - in upstate New York - where residents had been sharing photos of cabins online to encourage new creative constructions.
Leckart says the book celebrates cabins as the simplest form of architecture - that almost anyone can learn and attempt to build.
For the book's American examples, Leckart travelled to meet the people behind each project to try to "demystify" cabin life.
In the Rocky Moutains he discovered this tree-house - sitting 30 feet above ground near Sandpoint, Idaho.
The structures hug Western Larch trees - a strong, slow-growing species.
The man who created the tree-house, Ethan Schlussler, wanted to avoid bolting timber to the tree trunks - and instead developed an intricate clamping system.
Wooden struts are arranged vertically around the trunk and held in place by a metal cable.
The wires that hang down from the tree-house's front porch - not easy to spot in these images - are part of the bicycle elevator.
As you pedal, the bike travels either up or down.
Further south - in Scottsdale, Arizona - this next cabin was built by Dave Frazee, while he was studying at the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture.
The shelter is one of many student constructions found in the vast campus grounds - land which Wright himself purchased in 1937.
While hiking in 2007, Frazee discovered the remains of an old derelict shelter - including a concrete chimney - dating from the 1950s.
Over the next few years, until his graduation in 2011, he added his own design elements - including a glass box, cold-rolled steel panels, plywood and redwood.
In 2014, Frazee returned nervously to see his cabin for the first time in three years.
He was delighted to see that everything was essentially as he had left it.
Outside of the United States, a love of lodges is shared by the Scandinavians and northern Europeans.
The book is filled with eye-catching constructions that overlook Nordic and Alpine vistas.
This is a 200-year old stacked stone summer home at Linescio in the Swiss Alps - renovated in 2011 by Buchner Brundler Architekten.
And the diagonal lines of this next house look out on the hills of Saxony in eastern Germany.
Built at Oberwiesenthal, close to the border with the Czech Republic, the cubic home looks like it has been wedged into the hillside.
The Roundhouse at Bodrifty Farm - near Penzance in Cornwall - is a replica of a structure which is thought to have existed at a nearby Iron Age settlement.
With granite walls and a thatched roof - it measures 35ft (13m) wide, and 36ft (13.1m) high.
School parties visit the roundhouse and the nearby Iron Age remains out of the holiday season - while in the warmer months holidaymakers can book and stay.
Emma Mustill, whose family owns the farm, compares the view of the roof inside to that of a cathedral.
The wooden cross beams are supported by an intricate circular structure - known as a double-edged hex ring beam.
Staying circular - this yurt was built by Alec Farmer and Uula Jero in Dumfries and Galloway in Scotland.
The book describes itself as providing "inspiration for your quiet place somewhere".
But that doesn't mean your "quiet place" has to be luxurious.
This is a fisherman's cabin alongside Killary Harbour at Leenane in the Republic of Ireland.
And keeping a watery theme - the hull of a boat will keep you dry in this cabin at Machynlleth in north Wales.
Finally, a cabin with a sinking feeling?
No, it's a boathouse sitting in the clear waters of the Obersee - in Bavaria, southern Germany.
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