-Titulo Original : The Twenty-Ninth Day: Surviving A Grizzly Attack In The Canadian Tundra (*Large Print)
-Fabricante :
Blackstone Publishing
-Descripcion Original:
Review The Twenty-Ninth Day is a riveting read. Alex Messenger paints the realities of a multiday backcountry canoe trip, as well as the wild Canadian taiga and tundra, in equally vivid detail. Reminiscent of the Beckey brothers adventures into similar country at a similar age, this book calls us to reconsider what we believe possible of ourselves and our youth. The harrowing encounter with a grizzly bear and subsequent survival decisions take us straight to the heart of both life and adventure. --Heather Anish Anderson, author of Thirst: 2600 Miles to Home The Twenty-Ninth Day is the kind of book that requires the reader to set some time aside. Intrigued to find out what happens next, phone calls will go to voicemail and work deadlines will get postponed. His story is a solid addition to the genre of wilderness survival tales. --Minneapolis Star Tribune The Twenty-Ninth Day...well done! Alex Messenger is quite a good writer. It felt like I canoed the Barrens and long for a hot bath to soak my wounds. --Lonnie Dupre, polar explorer and author of Alone at the Top: Climbing Denali in the Dead of Winter Almost fifteen years later, Alex Messenger revisits the canoeing expedition that in a matter of minutes turned into a life-changing ordeal. That distance lends honesty and verve to a narrative that steadily builds toward its gripping climax. --David Roberts, author of Alone on the Ice and Four against the Arctic I will never forget the first time I met Alex and his impressive telling of the bear attack. I was transfixed. I thought if he is that adept and can think so quickly in the face of such extreme danger he would be a great person to work with. I was right. And now with his whole story down in book form, I see his writing is even better than his storytelling! I was transfixed again. --Jim Brandenburg, award-winning nature photographer, filmmaker, and bestselling author Messenger is a strong, observational writer, and the subarctic landscape becomes a character of its own. --Outside Over and over, Alex Messenger and his young comrades commit and recommit themselves to the perils of canoeing through the raw, bare landscape of Canadas far north. And when the worst happens, all of them -- Messenger included, despite his wounds -- rise to the daunting challenge with wit and skill. The result is one of the most harrowing first-person accounts of wilderness survival Ive ever come across. Its also a tribute to youth, good training, inexplicable luck and -- when the chips are really down -- sheer human courage. --Catherine Watson, award-winning writer and writing coach The premise of Alex Messengers debut The Twenty-Ninth Day is as inviting and cinematic as the pre-credits movie opening it will certainly be before you or I are much older...The whole thing is told in exactly the same kind of upbeat (Alex survives, obviously), turbo-charged prose that filled, for instance, Aron Ralstons Between a Rock and a Hard Place ... All thats left is for Stranger Things Finn Wolfhard to step into the role of Alex and do his best with a CGI bear. --Open Letters ReviewThe tale of six young men on a canoeing expedition in northern Canada -- and the bear attack that almost killed one of them...From the beginning, this chronicle of their days afield is populated by original observations...and salutes to a landscape rich with possibilities...A shimmering account both as a travelogue of the deep north and vivid portrayal of a grizzly bear attack. --Kirkus ReviewsTo put it simply, we were completely swept up in this story of wilderness adventure and survival. Alex Messenger has a knack for immersing the reader in an unforgettable journey in the Canadian tundra. Through his skillful descriptions of the place and interactions of the group, you will experience the stark beauty of the landscape as well as the adrenaline rush of paddling white water as six young men make their way through one of the most re
-Fabricante :
Blackstone Publishing
-Descripcion Original:
Review The Twenty-Ninth Day is a riveting read. Alex Messenger paints the realities of a multiday backcountry canoe trip, as well as the wild Canadian taiga and tundra, in equally vivid detail. Reminiscent of the Beckey brothers adventures into similar country at a similar age, this book calls us to reconsider what we believe possible of ourselves and our youth. The harrowing encounter with a grizzly bear and subsequent survival decisions take us straight to the heart of both life and adventure. --Heather Anish Anderson, author of Thirst: 2600 Miles to Home The Twenty-Ninth Day is the kind of book that requires the reader to set some time aside. Intrigued to find out what happens next, phone calls will go to voicemail and work deadlines will get postponed. His story is a solid addition to the genre of wilderness survival tales. --Minneapolis Star Tribune The Twenty-Ninth Day...well done! Alex Messenger is quite a good writer. It felt like I canoed the Barrens and long for a hot bath to soak my wounds. --Lonnie Dupre, polar explorer and author of Alone at the Top: Climbing Denali in the Dead of Winter Almost fifteen years later, Alex Messenger revisits the canoeing expedition that in a matter of minutes turned into a life-changing ordeal. That distance lends honesty and verve to a narrative that steadily builds toward its gripping climax. --David Roberts, author of Alone on the Ice and Four against the Arctic I will never forget the first time I met Alex and his impressive telling of the bear attack. I was transfixed. I thought if he is that adept and can think so quickly in the face of such extreme danger he would be a great person to work with. I was right. And now with his whole story down in book form, I see his writing is even better than his storytelling! I was transfixed again. --Jim Brandenburg, award-winning nature photographer, filmmaker, and bestselling author Messenger is a strong, observational writer, and the subarctic landscape becomes a character of its own. --Outside Over and over, Alex Messenger and his young comrades commit and recommit themselves to the perils of canoeing through the raw, bare landscape of Canadas far north. And when the worst happens, all of them -- Messenger included, despite his wounds -- rise to the daunting challenge with wit and skill. The result is one of the most harrowing first-person accounts of wilderness survival Ive ever come across. Its also a tribute to youth, good training, inexplicable luck and -- when the chips are really down -- sheer human courage. --Catherine Watson, award-winning writer and writing coach The premise of Alex Messengers debut The Twenty-Ninth Day is as inviting and cinematic as the pre-credits movie opening it will certainly be before you or I are much older...The whole thing is told in exactly the same kind of upbeat (Alex survives, obviously), turbo-charged prose that filled, for instance, Aron Ralstons Between a Rock and a Hard Place ... All thats left is for Stranger Things Finn Wolfhard to step into the role of Alex and do his best with a CGI bear. --Open Letters ReviewThe tale of six young men on a canoeing expedition in northern Canada -- and the bear attack that almost killed one of them...From the beginning, this chronicle of their days afield is populated by original observations...and salutes to a landscape rich with possibilities...A shimmering account both as a travelogue of the deep north and vivid portrayal of a grizzly bear attack. --Kirkus ReviewsTo put it simply, we were completely swept up in this story of wilderness adventure and survival. Alex Messenger has a knack for immersing the reader in an unforgettable journey in the Canadian tundra. Through his skillful descriptions of the place and interactions of the group, you will experience the stark beauty of the landscape as well as the adrenaline rush of paddling white water as six young men make their way through one of the most re
