Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This book puts you right in the scene, February 1, 2000
I have read many grizzly books and literature and this one stands alone. It is extremely realistic and the author is incredibly successful in putting the reader right there in Glacier Park with the bears. In a nutshell, this is a terrifying book. When I'm in grizzly country, I sometimes feel foolish with the precautions that I take when other (less-knowledgeable) tourists mindlessly cruise through the wilderness unharmed. This book puts those situations in perspective. That night in 1967, nobody thought the grizzlies were harmful because nobody had been killed in 57 years. The bears proved those tourists all wrong - they are very unpredictable. Buy this book.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Read this book on a backpacking trip at Glacier, May 28, 2003
By A Customer
In 1972 I had just arrived at Glacier, having driven across the country from Ohio, reading paperback books when it wasn't my turn to drive. I was reading this book the evening we arrived at Glacier (poor planning), and continued reading while my boyfriend set up the tent at a campground. The book was so engrossing, I read through dinner, and continued to read after he turned in. I finished at about 1:00 am, but was too frightened to walk the 20 feet from the car to the tent, so I spent the night, freezing the whole time, in the car. The next day we set out for the trailhead, and I've never, ever been so frightened on a backpacking trip. Yes, I remember the book vividly after more than 30 years!
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A terrifying, keep the tent flap closed, thriller!, September 15, 1997
By A Customer
If you are an outdoor enthusiast, wait until after your next backcountry excursion to read Night of the Grizzlies, Jack Olsen's true account of two deadly grizzly encounters in Montana's Glacier National Park during the summer of 1968. I read it on my journey home after a week long camping trip with my girlfriend in Montana's Grizzly Country. Had I read it earlier in my trip, I surely would have spent the rest of my nights in sleepless fear and endured some terrifying backwoods hikes.
Olsen masterfully sets a scene in which Man and Grizzly continually come into close contact with disaster narrowly averted. Before the attacks in Glacier, Grizzlies were treated as a nuisance in the park by both park officials and visitors alike. Indeed the general feeling at the park was that since no man had ever been killed by a bear in Glacier National Park no man ever would. At Granite Park Chalet, a kind of backcountry "resort", the bears nightly visits to the garbage dump were anticipated and applauded much like an after dinner comic at a Poconos lodge. What makes Olsen's account so strong is that while we sense where this precarious relationship between Man and Bear is going, when it gets there it is more horrifying than we could ever imagine.
Outdoorsmen and urbanites alike will not be able to put this book down. The reader will be at once amazed by and terrified of the power and visciousness of the title beasts. Yet as the tale unfolds we see how Man has perhaps brought this tragedy upon himself. We weep for the two young girls who died such violent and gruesome deaths. But we also weep for the Grizzlies who merely wish to live as God intended, in the wilderness far from the smell of Man. Review by Larry Maier, Long Beach NY
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