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Never Turn Back: The Life of Whitewater Pioneer Walt Blackadar
 
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Never Turn Back: The Life of Whitewater Pioneer Walt Blackadar [Hardcover]

Ron Watters (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 1995
Never Turn Back is the gripping and compelling life story of Dr. Walt Blackadar, a physician from a small town in Idaho. At the age of 49, he shocked the outdoor world when he made a solo kayak journey down the treacherous rapids of Turnback Canyon on the remote and wild Alsek River in Canada and Alaska.

Blackadar's accomplishment on Turnback Canyon was the river equivalent of the first ascent of Everest, and when excerpts from his Alsek journal were published in Sports Illustrated, he became an instant sensation. He was at the top of his sport at an age when most athletes are long retired.

Then suddenly, his spectacular rise veered wildly off course when a young woman tragically died on one of his kayaking expeditions. Heartbroken over her death and plagued with mounting physical problems, his kayaking technique began to deteriorate.

Yet he had a spirit that was irrepressible, and pitting himself in a race against his body's clock, he sought out and faced off against the world's most formidable whitewater.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Editorial Reviews

Review

Small town physician relates his solo kayak journey down a remote river in Canada and Alaska, revealing his challenging journey down some of the most treacherous whitewater rapids in the world. Enjoy a story which is packed with action and real-life adventure. -- Midwest Book Review

From the Publisher

This is the true-life story of one of the outdoor world's most famous individuals. Told with consummate skill by author Ron Watters, it is a powerful and unforgettable story. It has been enthusiastically received by reviewers and readers, nationally and internationally. It's simply a good story of adventure, excitement, and the power of the human spirit.

Brief synopsis of the book:

On August 25, 1971, Walter Lloyd Blackadar paddled his kayak into the unknown waters of Turnback Canyon on the Alsek River. He was 49 years old and all alone in the vast, glaciated St. Elias wilderness of Canada and Alaska.

That night while trying to repair his damaged kayak, he wrote: "In the gorge and stranded. This has been a day! I want any kayaker to read my words well. The Alsek gorge is unpaddleable!" He described the rapids in the canyon as "a frothy mess that was far worse than anything I have ever seen. I am sure it was 20 degrees down with the most gigantic waves and foam and holes on all sides of me. Very narrow--like trying to run down a coiled rattler's back, the rattler striking me from all sides."

Blackadar survived his frightening run through Turnback Canyon, and in doing so, he became whitewater sport's most famous figure. His extraordinary journey down the Alsek is only one part of the story. He was a doctor. Trained at Dartmouth and Columbia, he moved west to a small town in Idaho to be near good fishing and hunting. But in time, the wilderness around him shrank in size and the once great salmon runs dwindled. Alarmed, he began to speak out for the protection of rivers and wild lands and took increasingly unpopular stands in a community whose economy was tied closely to resource extraction.

He was also a man with faults and failings. Never Turn Back is not a one-sided story. It is a carefully researched and objective look at all of Blackadar's life. Casting aside the subject-as-hero approach, Never Turn Back is a refreshing departure from most outdoor literature, telling Blackadar's story the way it happened. It is this honest portrayal that makes the book such a captivating one. From the first page through the unforgettable last chapter, it is a fascinating and candid account of a remarkable individual. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 298 pages
  • Publisher: Great Rift Pr; New edition edition (April 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1877625027
  • ISBN-13: 978-1877625022
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6.4 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,292,388 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This is a great book, May 4, 2001
In August 1971, after three days of paddling his fragile kayak through a wilderness of bears and glaciers, Walt Blackadar , a doctor from Salmon, Idaho, tackled what is arguably one of the worst stretches of white water in the world- Turnback canyon on the Alsek river. He was forty nine years old and he was alone.

His solo run of Turnback canyon was one of the major breakthroughs in the history of white water kayaking and has been compared to the first ascent of Everest without oxygen. Although techniques and technologies improve, psychological barriers define what is possible. Walt's run of Turnback, no matter how exaggerated it may have been in hindsight, blew those definitions wide open.

In Never Turn back, Ron Watters, himself no slouch when it comes to river running, tells the story of this impressive man. Although born in the eastern united states, Blackadar went west looking for adventure. He didn't take up white water kayaking until he was in his forties. He quickly established a reputation though his pioneering runs on the biggest white water in the states.

The chapters dealing with Blackadar's solo run are the core of this book, an inspiring description of one man pitting himself willfully against the possibility of his own annihilation. Turnback made Walt a celebrity. Seven years later he was dead.

Watters deals honestly with Blackadar; he comes across as a loud, brash boozy man. He also describes Walt's failures and there are some great stories along the way.

Blackadar, like Mike Jones, died in 1978. Unlike Jones, Walt died in what seems a stupid accident on a Saturday morning paddle on a local river. The image of him causally trying to drawstroke his boat from under the log he was pinned against is one of the book's most haunting images.

There are two underlying themes which make this so much more than an accumulation of well told kayaking stories. The first is the tragic story of a man forced to be the impotent witness to his body's slow decay, a man who was terrified by the thought of dying in bed of cancer and old age, who constantly looked for new challenges to prove he was till young and strong. This is the man who constantly claimed that was invincible, that he would never die on a river and that he could, and would, one day paddle over Niagra falls and live to tell the tale.

Walt was also a representative of a certain, almost specifically American hero. He comes across as John Wayne in a kayak. Loud, bursting with energy, he went west to find adventure and the adventures he sought were the traditional test of "man in the wilderness". But there was no longer any social purpose to these adventures and the people of salmon recognised this and protested against their doctor continually risking his life. The days of the great individual , if they ever really existed, were disappearing fast. Salmon was changing from wild west town to settled community. Blackadar's lone yellow kayak in a world of ice grey is a symbol of the final fling of a man unencumbered by corporate sensibility, innocent of economic calculation, impervious to social pressure.

Never Turn Back is meticulously researched and written in a stylish, understated prose that artfully lets the subject tell itself. If you know nothing about Blackadar and have no interest in white water kayaking, this is still a rare book, intelligently and honestly written, an entertaining and thought provoking biography.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Haunting accomplishments, February 18, 2000
My thoughts have often returned to this book even though I read it several months ago. I cannot quite grasp how Blackadar survived the first descent of Turnback Canyon so long ago with the older equipment and kayak, alone. Such strength, courage, and focus is rarely encountered. He belongs to an elite group. He is compared to Hillary but I think he is more aptly compared to Mallory. Watters portrays several sides to this most interesting man. I find myself often thinking about how different he is from me. Yet the exercise of comparison is rewarding.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An exciting and emotional rollercoaster of a book., December 2, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: Never Turn Back: The Life of Whitewater Pioneer Walt Blackadar (Hardcover)
This book gave me a different look of a man that I have seen many times. It kept me on the edge of my seat. Although I knew what the outcome was prior to reading it, it still brought tears to my eyes. Well worth reading it.
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