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In the Shadow of Denali: Life and Death on Alaska's Mt. McKinley

In the Shadow of Denali: Life and Death on Alaska's Mt. McKinley
By Jonathan Waterman

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Product Description

Jonathan Waterman paints a startlingly intimate portrait of the white leviathan and brings to vivid life men and women whose fates have entwined on its sheer icy peak.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #31241 in Books
  • Published on: 2009-12-08
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 208 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

Review
A fine writer with a profound appreciation of what towering mountains are. . . this is a book about the high mountains written by a real mountain man. -- James Michenier

Personal, intense, gripping . . . a compelling book. He is a serious writer. -- Alaska Magazine

Review

"Stratospherically the finest in the genre. With this book, Waterman has earned a place alongside such great modern American mountain writers as David Roberts and Jon Krakauer." --Greg Child, author of Thin Air, from the Foreword
 
"A mountaineering classic, not only because it takes as its subject the nation's highest mountain but also because Waterman writes with unusual vision and spirit . . . Striking not a single false note . . . this is a strong, mature work by a gifted writer." --Booklist
 
"Taut understated prose captures the commitment of dedicated climbers." --Publishers Weekly
 
"Tales from the mean side of Denali, from a freelancer with a reputation for writing fine climbing stories . . . Arresting . . . A pleasure to read." --Kirkus Reviews
 
"A fine writer with a profound appreciation of what towering mountains are . . . this is a book about the high mountains written by a real mountain man." --James Michener
 
"A magnificent book, beautifully written, a superb delineation, in the broadest sense, of one person's relationship to landscape." --Ann Zwinger
 
"Masterful storytelling . . . There is climbing in this book, but remarkably it is not a book about climbing, any more than A River Runs Through It was a book about fishing. Waterman the writer resembles that other Alaskan adventurer, Jack London. But in his storytelling, in the way he renders non-fiction close to fiction with its alien and thoughtful beauty, he descends more directly from Norman Maclean . . . He is our Ishmael, the eloquent witness to a profound journey." --Jeff Long, Boulder Camera
 
"Bewitching. It was an honor to read this eyes-open chronicle of being beaten to a psychological pulp and then reborn." --American Alpine Journal
 
"Poetic and powerful--a testimony to both the man and the mountain." --Dennis Eberl
 
"Personal, intense, gripping . . . a compelling book. He is a serious writer, daring to take up the challenge of avoiding hackneyed prose in telling about fear, cold, wind and such wondrous beauty as the aurora shining on the mountain." --Bill Hunt, Alaska
 
 

From the Back Cover

Rising more than 20,000 feet into the Alaskan sky is Denali, the tallest mountain in North America. In this collection of exhilarating and stunning narratives, Jonathan Waterman paints a startlingly intimate portrait of the white leviathan and brings to vivid life the men and women whose fates have entwined on its sheer icy peak.

“Stratospherically the finest in the genre. With this book, Waterman has earned a place alongside such great modern American mountain writers as David Roberts and Jon Krakauer.”
—Greg Child, author of Thin Air, from the Foreword
 
“A mountaineering classic, not only because it takes as its subject the nation’s highest mountain but also because Waterman writes with unusual vision and spirit. . . . Striking not a single false note . . . this is a strong, mature work by a gifted writer.”
—Booklist
 
“A magnificent book, beautifully written.”
—Ann Zwinger, author of Run, River, Run
 
“Tales from the mean side of Denali. . . . Arresting. . . . A pleasure to read.”
—Kirkus Reviews
 
“Taut understated prose captures the commitment of dedicated climbers.”
—Publishers Weekly 


Customer Reviews

COMPELLING5
I've read countless books of this genre, and this is one of the best of it's kind. This is an incredible book, hands down. What makes this particular book stand apart? The stories the writer tells, after all, come with the territory - hubris plagued wannabees getting stuck on the mountain and being rescued (or not); ego-driven exploites and feuds amoung climbers; the requisite bodily suffering; the more infrequent triumphs on pinnacles that are mythical to most of us. Crack open any mountaineering book and you get all of that. What you don't get in some of those other books, however, this one provides in magnificent detail - the real, human, gut reaction to being right in the middle of it all. This author does not write obliquely. There is nothing recondite about any point he tries to make. It's the stories in this book that draw you in, but it's the candour and the honesty of the writing that keep you there. Take, for example, the author's depiction of a friend's inability to reconsile himself with the modern world and his sad, subsequent demise. The author invites you to become friends with the guy yourself by revealing his small acts of kindness and his prevailing innoscense. You empathise with the guy, you like the guy, and only then do you read about his self-inflicted free-fall. Or the author's illuminating, compassionate portrayal of the "other" John Waterman. The author introduces you to this long deceased climber and his father both. He takes you into the complex intensity of their relationship and parallels it with John's equaly intense relationship with the mountains. And then he jars you with an emotional account of a false reunion between father and son. It's haunting. The best case in point, however, is the comparison the author draws between a climbing friend's nobel death inside a frigid crevasse (a death so insidious, as far as I'm concerned, that if there was ever a movie made about it I wouldn't go near the theater), versus the helicopter rescue of some gossipy dilitantes who demanded that the pilot stop for fast food on their way to being safely delivered from their own stupidity. The author doesn't just tell the tale of another senseless rescue or another tragic accident. He forces the reader to really think about it, by conjuring two situations of opposite extremes and rendering an obvious conclusion in the comparison. His unique, bipartisan involvement in both these situations made it possible to give first-hand accounts of each. Yet he's certainly far from bipartisan with his sympathies and he's not afraid to share these opinions with the reader. Any hack writer can reproduce information on paper. Waterman infuses his work with feeling. One last word - look at "A Requeim For the Bears" as a call to arms rather than just tossing the book aside when you're done. It's the real deal, and we all need to do something about it. And that's MY opinion.

Wonderful book5
"In the Shadow of Denali" is a collection of articles about mountaineering, Alaskan life, and the wilderness. It is the best collection of stories I have read since Krakauer's Eiger Dreams. Although technically about mountain climbing, the heart of this book is the effect the mountain has on the people who visit it, climb it, and live and work in its shadows. This book is not only for climbers (and armchair climbers) but for anyone who loves the wilderness. I hope Waterman writes another book very soon! I highly recommend you read this one.

Uncovering the realism of mountaineering...5
A real look into the world of mountaineering that hasn't been glamorized or overly dramatized (in the case of other authors). The primary focus is Denali, but the book often shifts attention away from it, giving the reader a good look into the mountaineering career of Jon Waterman and a bit of insight upon many others. For the experienced mountaineer, they can most likely relate to many of Jon's experiences. To the less experienced, it will give a sobering wakeup call to the realities of mountaineering. I must disagree with the reader from NY listed below as stating that "The author falls into the trap of thinking that climbing is going to give him and some other fellow climbers an insight into life beyond that of the ordinary man." For anyone who has survived a truly epic climb, one does gain a bit of insight into life that they failed to notice beforehand, and that many others do not completely understand...do this regularly enough, and it can in fact change a person. The book was NOT self-indulgent in the least...merely giving a first hand account of his experiences, both good and bad. If you are planning a trip to Denali, this should be required reading....