Quotes
“Vivid…Hall delivers this tragic event through his recounting of recorded radio conversations, journal entries, and pages of grisly detail…A dramatic and respectful homage.’” Kirkus Reviews
“Manchester’s…reading moves along steadily and quickly engages listeners with the developing disaster and subsequent rescue attempts as well as the emotions of many of the participants.” AudioFile
“Everest gets the publicity, but Alaska’s Mount McKinley—also known as Denali—can be equally nasty, writes Hall, former publisher of Alaska magazine, in this exciting account of a 1967 climbing debacle…skillful [and] heartrending.” Publishers Weekly
“Hall’s competent narrative provides a reasonably well-balanced discussion of the continuing debate surrounding the tragedy.” Library Journal
“The ill-fated Wilcox expedition to Denali finds an able chronicler in Andy Hall’s gripping account of mountain majesty, mountain gloom, and human doom.” Maurice Isserman, New York Times bestselling author
“A haunting, meticulously researched account of
twelve men’s encounter with the awesome fury of nature.” Amanda Padoan, author of Buried in the Sky
“In this straightforward, balanced account of the greatest mountaineering disaster in Alaskan history, Andy Hall allows the full tragedy of that episode to emerge. In resisting the facile urge to lay blame, his narrative captures with gripping immediacy the intersection of seemingly small human decisions with one of the most powerful storms ever to descend on Denali.” David Roberts, author of The Mountain of My Fear
“The ill-fated Wilcox expedition to Denali finds an able chronicler in Andy Hall’s gripping account of mountain majesty, mountain gloom, and human doom.” Maurice Isserman, coauthor of Fallen Giants
“One of those couldn’t-put-it-down books! This harrowing story of a more than forty-year-old mountaineering tragedy is raw and immediate as it marches relentlessly towards the final, devastating end.” Bernadette McDonald, author of Freedom Climbers