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A Bolt from the Blue

The Epic True Story of Danger, Daring, and Heroism at 13,000 Feet

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
FIVE INJURED CLIMBERS. TEN SEASONED RANGERS. ONE IMPOSSIBLE RESCUE.
On the afternoon of July 26, 2003, six vacationing mountain climbers ascended the peak of the Grand Teton in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Rain and colliding air currents blew in, and soon a massive electrical charge began to build. As the group began to retreat from its location, a colossal lightning bolt struck and pounded through the body of every climber. One of the six died instantly, one lay critically injured next to her body, and four dangled perilously into the chasm below. In riveting, page-turning prose, veteran journalist Jennifer Woodlief tells the story of the climb, the arrival of the storm, and the unprecedented rescue by the Jenny Lake Rangers, one of the most experienced climbing search-and-rescue teams in the country.
Against the dramatic landscape of the Teton Range, Woodlief brings to life the grueling task of the rangers, a band of colorful characters who tackle one of the riskiest, most physically demanding jobs in the world. By turns terrifying and exhilarating, A Bolt from the Blue is both a testament to human courage and an astonishing journey into one of history's most dangerous mountain rescues.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 2, 2012
      Armchair travelers and bona fide adventurers alike will love Woodlief's thrilling newest (after A Wall of White). In 2003, six climbers ascended the Upper Exum Ridge of the Grand Teton in Wyoming as a storm approached. During their descent, an enormous bolt of lightning ("weather's version of an absolute sucker punch") struck their rappelling rope, exploding through the bodies of each of the climbers. One died immediately, some were flung from the cliff, and others suffered severe burns and paralysis. The local rescue teamâthe revered Jenny Lake Rangersâwere called in to extricate the many victims, all before nightfall and in the midst of a relentless storm. Woodlief, a former district attorney and reporter for Sports Illustrated, explains technical details and deftly narrates the experiences of the injured climbers and risk-taking rangers, and her sense of scene and timing is impeccable. She describes climbing as "a drug of self-expression, of calmness, of centering⦠breaking down the mountain of a problem into many tiny dilemmas." Woodlief brings readers into the heart of these myriad difficultiesâof helicopters amid craggy mountain passes, "shadows deepening" as the day draws to a close, a dangling climber bent backwards head to heels. Fans of Jon Krakaeur's Into Thin Air will find in Woodlief an engaging and exciting guide.

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  • English

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