| Deep Survival: Who Lives, Who Dies, and Why: True Stories of Miraculous Endurance and Sudden Death |  | Author: Laurence Gonzales Creator: Stefan Rudnicki Publisher: Blackstone Audio Inc. Category: Book
List Price: $72.00 Buy New: $45.30 You Save: $26.70 (37%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 131 reviews Sales Rank: 1358376
Media: Audio CD Edition: Unabridged Number Of Items: 8 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 6.6 x 6.3 x 1.1
ISBN: 0786163976 EAN: 9780786163977 ASIN: 0786163976
Publication Date: August 15, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: BRAND NEW Direct To You! Pristine. Immediate Shipping.
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| • | Paperback - Deep Survival: Who Lives, Who Dies, and Why | | • | Audio Download - Deep Survival: True Stories of Miraculous Endurance and Sudden Death (Unabridged) | | • | MP3 CD - Deep Survival: Who Lives, Who Dies, And Why. True Stories of Miraculous Endurance And Sudden Death, Library Edition | | • | Audio Cassette - Deep Survival: Who Lives, Who Dies, and Why: True Stories of Miraculous Endurance and Sudden Death | | • | Hardcover - Deep Survival: Who Lives, Who Dies, and Why | | • | Audio Cassette - Deep Survival: Who Lives, Who Dies, And Why | | • | Audio CD - Deep Survival: Who Lives, Who Dies, And Why |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description After her plane crashes, a seventeen-year-old girl spends eleven days walking through the Peruvian jungle. Against all odds, with no food, shelter, or equipment, she gets out. A better equipped group of adult survivors of the same crash sits down and dies. What makes the difference? Examining such stories of miraculous endurance and tragic death, Deep Survival takes us from the tops of snowy mountains and the depths of oceans to the workings of the brain that control our behavior. Through analysis of case studies, the author describes the essence of a survivor and offers steps for staying out of trouble. In the end, he finds, it is what's in your heart, not what's in your pack, that separates the living from the dead. This book will change the way we understand ourselves and the great outdoors.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 126 more reviews...
fascinating July 9, 2008 I really enjoyed this book. Once I started reading it, I really couldn't put it down. I did skim through some (but not most) of the chaos/systems theory sections on my first read-through, and I went back to re-read some of the more dramatic sections, too, to try to picture the events, especially in the mountain-climbing scenario. I've been going on some boy scout outings with my twin sons, and we recently went canoeing in the wilderness for a week. It wasn't exactly an aircraft carrier, but I was making some comparisons as I was reading. (For some people, a camping trip is a survival situation.) Fun and quick summer read, for generally literate and curious folks.
rocked me to my core June 30, 2008 I like reading negative reviews before buying since I find them the most honest and interesting, but after reading this book I don't understand where the negative reviewers are coming from. Maybe this is the kind of book that just hits some people hard and not others. Certainly it is not a reality-tv treatment of sensationalist disaster stories. Is that what some readers feel is missing? This book is a very thoughtful study of who survives and why. I hope I am never in a position similar to some of the courageous people in this book; nonetheless I reflect on their "survivor characteristics" regularly and have applied several of them to my daily life. I will never be quite the same after reading this book.
Something off about this... June 16, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I love natural disaster genre, but this book fell flat for me. Offering some Zen insights, and a few badly narrated but intriguing case studies, the author's voice kept intervening in strange and ultimately annoying ways, which is perhaps why I didn't really like the book: I found the author's voice annoying. Deep Survival is really more about Gonzales' father than surviving, per se, and he seems to have used the trope of survival to offer a meditation on his Dad's spectacular survival in WW2, which is fine is you want a father memoir, or a WW2 experience, but rather less so if you are more interested in case studies than Pater Gonzales or the author's own masculinist excesses, which were often annoying and badly narrated. In the end, this is memoir-cum-vanity autobiography. I was expecting something more interesting.
Could be Classified a "Self-Help" Book June 14, 2008 As a recent "survivor" of several close family member's death's in the last few years, I felt this book is a "how-to" survive any of life's ordeals. When we suffer traumatic events - we become "lost", our world doesn't make sense anymore. The "map" to our life is altered. We try to "bend the map" to have it make sense, but when we do this - we keep going deeper into the wilderness and get more lost. This book reminded me of my own "survival" story (which still unfolds) - I felt the accounts of being lost in the woods or at sea, were analogies to my own life's circumstances (death/loss). When lost, we need to accept we are lost - then adapt. This is the work of grieving as well. One can read all the feel good grieving books they want on how to honor their loved one (and that is a good thing - it has it's place), but at the end of the day; to survive you need to accept and adapt to your "new map". I recommend this book to anyone who wants a compelling account of survival as a good read and to those who have suffered trauma in life as a guide in "getting out of the woods".
fantastic book June 2, 2008 I couldn't believe that I couldn't put this book down. Full disclosure -I also read it at a time when I was totally obsessed with the great depression and WWII, after having watched all of Ken Burns' piece...
Yes, it is full of technical mountaineering type terms, half of which I didn't know and don't care to learn further about, but it was still fascinating to me. It gives a little more meat the the 'right stuff' factor of a survive and thrive mindset at large. If you're a life lesson concepts / big picture kinda sort, it's a really good read. And if you always have a swiss army knife on your key chain, bandaids in your purse and a mylar blanket packed along with trailmix and water in the trunk of your car, you also might like it.
But there also are crazy stories to follow where you can't imagine how someone ended up alive that make it interesting, too, if you are only in it for the donner-party-type plot...
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