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Dangerous Games: Ice Climbing, Storm Kayaking and Other Adventures from the Extreme Edge of Sports
 
 
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Dangerous Games: Ice Climbing, Storm Kayaking and Other Adventures from the Extreme Edge of Sports [Hardcover]

Andrew Todhunter (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 19, 2000
In October of 1982, a twenty-seven-year-old British alpinist named Alex MacIntyre was killed by rock fall during a descent of the south face of Annapurna." Thus begins this enthralling collection of Andrew Todhunter's tales of risk in the outdoors. From the frozen gullies of the Scottish highlands to the sunless depths of California's longest cave, Atlantic Monthly contributor Todhunter writes about so-called extreme sports from the inside. With the self-effacing gumption of a young George Plimpton or Tim Cahill, Todhunter is not content to interview his subjects from the safety of sea level.

Instead, he climbs, paddles, dives under the ice, crawls through caves, and leaps-with grave reservations-from cliffs, in the company of some of the world's premier outdoor athletes. He does these things for fun, and writes about them in a controlled literary style reminiscent of John McPhee. "The Last Voyage of Steve Sinclair" (as "Gale-Force Kayaking") and "Beneath the Ice" received notable mention in The Best American Sports Writing series, edited by Glenn Stout. "The Precipitous World of Dan Osman" went on to become Todhunter's critically acclaimed book Fall of the Phantom Lord (Anchor Books, 1998). And although there are tragedies in this collection, past and present, Dangerous Games is no mere litany of disasters; "I prefer to write about the living," says Todhunter. "I want to know what pushes them to their own edge and what brings them back.   But people do die, from time to time, by skirting that edge, and when that happens it's inevitably part of the story."

Here are nonsporting stories as well: "The Taming of the Saw," a delightful essay about learning to use a chainsaw in New York's Catskill Mountains; "The Wreck of the Belle," recounting a week spent with nautical archaeologists diving for a seventeenth-century French shipwreck; and finally, "Winter Passage," Todhunter's account of an Atlantic crossing, in January, on a German freighter. "It was a bit like Das Boot without the torpedoes," Todhunter says. "We spent most of the nights in the ship's bar. The ship's mechanic had brain cancer.  Most of them had failed marriages, or children they would never know. Many of them led brutal, broken lives, yet they were eminently decent. For me, the freighter was a way to get to Spain. For the crew-as the saying goes-it was a prison at sea."
Beautifully written and meticulously reported from the front lines of America's obsession with risk sports, Dangerous Games is a classic collection of adventure tales from one of America's finest outdoor writers.

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Atlantic Monthly columnist Todhunter has compiled his articles on outdoor adventures and extreme sports into a stunning collection. Though these stories are from real life, they read like short fiction, vignettes of incredible characters and their even more incredible pastimes. The first story, for instance, describes a climb with an accomplished alpinist. What's amazing about this account is not so much the climb itself, nor the fact that Todhunter makes the trek himself, but, instead, the host's moving reflections on the falling death of his protege and friend several years earlier. Todhunter weaves the excitement of what the adventurers do with the poignancy of who they are--whether it's a 50-year-old father climbing a mountain, a 28-year-old utility worker scuba diving under 18 inches of ice, or a middle-aged woman crawling through California caves. A real gem of adventure work. Mary Frances Wilkens
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

From Kirkus Reviews

Top-draw extreme sports writing from Todhunter (Fall of the Phantom Lord, 1998), unadorned and vital and appealingly decorous.This collection of magazine pieces, mostly drawn from The Atlantic Monthly, showcases Todhunter's talents as a chronicler of extreme sports-some of which he partakes of himself. Although the author now has a family to bevel his more flamboyantly dangerous sporting appetites, that doesn't deter him from a short, roped free fall off a cliff or hairy icefall ascents-but he draws the line at storm kayaking in the Pacific off northern California. He writes without bravado, without false modesty or striking poses. He is simply fascinated (bewitched, maybe) by dangerous sports, by what motivates people to engage in them. But there are no clear answers to the question of his own motivation, and just disturbing intuitions: about the aesthetics of danger, or regarding his convictions that some climbs are "worth dying for," that "the wisdom of timidity reeks so powerfully of death." There is a passion for the genuine, whether that is winter climbing in the Scottish Highlands, which still feels a grizzled affair best done in hobnailed boots, or if a chainsaw is worth the price: "that what relieves us of our labor removes us from our lives. We grow more frail and dim-witted with each invention that outstrips us." The best piece of all concerns an activity made of magic rather than stark terror. It happens on-make that in-a frozen lake: Todhunter and a friend are ice diving and have inflated their suits so the buoyancy allows them to stand on the under-surface of the ice. They are tethered to tenders by a long rope a good distance away from the entry hole. The tenders start to pull: "The lines go taut and we begin to move, gaining speed. Howling through our regulators, we ski upside down across the ice."Todhunter at times misplaces his fear, though his artful talent for describing the telling moments in extreme sports, as well as their often-otherworldly settings, is everywhere. -- Copyright © 2000 Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Doubleday; 1 edition (September 19, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 038548643X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385486439
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.8 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,173,645 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It doesn't get much better..., November 25, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Dangerous Games: Ice Climbing, Storm Kayaking and Other Adventures from the Extreme Edge of Sports (Hardcover)
The cover is misleading. Many of the stories in the collection are not "Sport" at all. These are views into dangerous activities, which range from essays on rescue workers off the coast of Northern California to introspective musings on the chainsaw. Others are indeed sports, though not the type you view on ESPN; these are stories of individuals who have concocted their own unique flavor of excitement: from storm kayaking in the Pacific to leaping off high bridges. Todhunter is fascinated by risk and danger and the people who engage in these activities.

Whether climbing vertical ice or diving beneath frozen lakes, Todhunter delivers crisp, clean, first-hand insight, with a full shot of adrenaline in the mix. An experienced diver and climber, Todhunter plays at times neophyte, apprentice, novice, and savvy traveler (in measure with his experience) all with equal grace. He shares his far-flung interests in high-adrenaline experiences with a literary style that inspires rapt, hypnotic, page-turning awe.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars what it's like to be there, October 30, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Dangerous Games: Ice Climbing, Storm Kayaking and Other Adventures from the Extreme Edge of Sports (Hardcover)
Whether or not you are an ice climber, a diver for wrecks, or someone who explores the depths of caves, all of which the writer is, Todhunter can make you feel you've been there,often with amazing descriptions, sometimes beautiful, sometimes chilling. Cases in point, a couple of brief samples from the chapter called "Beneath the ice."

"Far above the triangle [cut through the ice of a Sierra lake]is aglow in the dimly translucent field of ice. Our lines stretch upward, vanishing. I give a firm tug: "Okay." A tug comes back fom my tender. "Acknowledged." The trail of air bubbles works its way to the surface, rumbling faintly. I take a deep breath and expel it with one quick contraction of the diaphragm. The body of air breaks into three spheres that flatten into mushrooms the diammeter of dinner plates, expanding as they climb. Surrounded by a host of smaller bubbles, 100 silver dollars, 1,000 dimes--twirling in their wake, the three upturned bowls of air catch the sun as they near the surface, gleam like mirrors, and disappear."

And its ending [as they come up]:"On the other side of the ice, our tenders set off like sled dogs on the run. The lines go aut and we begin to move, gaining speed. Howling through our regulators, we ski upside down across the ice.The wedge of blue sky suddenly appears, hurtling toward us. As I dive headfirst through the triangle I'm blinded. I look straight down into the sun."

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In October of 1982, a twenty-seven-year-old British alpinist named Alex MacIntyre was killed by rock fall during a descent of the south face of Annapurna. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
abalone diver, ice tools, helicopter unit, underwater archaeology, ice climbing, first ascent
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Matagorda Bay, United States, Stillwater Cove, New York, Lake Tahoe, New Hampshire, Salt Point, San Francisco, Black Dike, Dan Osman, Larry Anderson, Northern California, Randy Riggins, Roger Rude, Christine Riggins, Corpus Christi, Dave Boyce, East Germany, Force Ten, John Bouchard, Les Osman
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