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Climb focuses on the most exciting descriptions of climbing in the
world, from the cliffs of Yosemite to the windswept towers of
Patagonia to the high peaks of Alaska and the Himalayas. Stories
include Jon Krakauer's first-person look at the risks of climbing
Mt. McKinley's West Buttress route, which has killed scores of
climbers in recent years; Chris Bonington's classic account of the
Annapurna expedition, which introduced technical rock climbing at
high altitude; Tom Patey's hilarious profile of the great climber
and even greater misanthrope Don Whilans, describing an attempt the
two made on the Eiger North Face; and Rob Taylor's experience
breaking a leg high on Africa's Mount Kenya.
It's been a half century since Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing
made the first ascent of Everest. Their success capped a
thirty-year struggle that cost more than a dozen lives--and touched
off a new era in the history of the mountain. The past fifty years
have seen Everest become an even greater magnet for
adventurers--both foolish and heroic. Some of the world's best
climbers have carved out incredibly dangerous new routes on the
peak, and many have died trying. Meanwhile, hundreds of nonclimbers
have taken on Everest, with mixed results. This history has created
an entire literature in itself--a story of triumph and tragedy of
epic proportions. Whether it's Peter Boardman on being forced to
leave a friend to die near the summit, Stephen Venables on spending
a night out near the summit--an experience only a handful of men
have survived--or Chris Bonington on the death of Boardman and Joe
Tasker on the Northeast Ridge, almost every great climbing writer
has tackled some aspect of the mountain, and Epics on Everest
includes their best work.
Wise Guys takes readers into the heart of Sopranos territory, with
a collection featuring the work of best-selling writers from E. L.
Doctorow (with an account of mobster Dutch Schultz that includes
one of the great execution scenes in the literature of the Mob) to
Nicholas Pileggi (on Henry Hill's first prison term, overflowing
with good pasta and booze). Other pieces include Jerry Capeci and
Gene Mustain reconstruction of the vicious hit on "Big Paulie"
Castellano outside of Spark's Steakhouse (which catapulted John
Gotti to leadership of the Gambino family), Mario Puzo's riveting
account of a don's ascent (a tale of deceit, murder and, above all,
cunning), and Norman Lewis on where it all began: the Sicilian
Mafia's battle against Mussolini and its return to greater strength
than ever.
New York has always inspired larger-than-life tales and great
writing--but on the topic of cops and crime it provides more raw
material than almost anywhere else. A long history of classic
films, television hits, and of course, books, have turned the New
York City Police Department into a symbol for the dark drama of
urban police work. And the rich and colorful vein of literature
which has grown up around this culture makes NYPD not only a
gripping read but a literary tour de force. Adrenaline Books takes
you inside this gritty, tough life of being a cop in New York City.
In addition to works by best-selling authors such as Peter Maas and
Tom Wolfe, the book will include selections that offer a broad and
deep look at the department's many faces: Carsten Stroud tells what
it's like to track down a killer; Richard Rosenthal offers a sense
of the pressures and risks of going undercover; and Bill McCarthy
and Mike Mallowe offer a guided tour of the city's dregs and the
pressures of working with its hardest cases. Philip Gourevitch's
account of a cop's dedicated efforts to resurrect a cold case;
Marcus Laffey's already near-classic articles on life as a
patrolman; and Peter Hellman's best-seller Chief, written with an
NYPD chief of detectives help round out this fascinating view of
the NYPD and the forces that have made it such a compelling subject
for so many good writers. " ...Try Adrenaline Books...In three
years, this 20-volume anthology series has earned a cult
following."--ESPN the Magazine
Gang life is both the starting point and the dark side of the
American dream. Ethnic groups and immigrants have long turned to
gangs for protection and support when it was offered nowhere else.
From the Five Points to South Central L.A., Bowery Boys to Bloods
and Crips, the James gang to gangsta rap, gangs offer a largely
urban version of the American frontier: an opportunity and a refuge
for society's outlaws, outcasts, and outsiders. Featuring superb
writing drawn from the best fiction, nonfiction, and journalism,
Gangs takes the reader on a tour of this underground, from accounts
of New York's violent past by Herbert Asbury (The Gangs of New
York) and Mark Helprin (A Winter's Tale) to Hunter S. Thompson's
unflinching report from within the Hell's Angels and T. J. English
inside America's most notorious Vietnamese gang. Other selections
bring readers into the Irish, Italian, and Jewish Mobs as well as
the Triads of America's Chinatowns, and chart the role of the
vicious drug trade in contemporary gang life. With photographs and
its wild and turbulent tour through the American underworld, Gangs
paints a visceral and fascinating picture of a part of the American
experience that is more nightmare than dream.
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Shark (Paperback)
Nathaniel May, Clint Willis
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R629
Discovery Miles 6 290
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Shark picks up where previous Adrenaline titles such as Rough Water
and Deep Blue left off, with a collection focusing on man's
terrifying interactions with one of the planet's most frightening
beasts--an animal that arouses our most primal fears--fears that
were recently brought to the surface by an outbreak of fatal
attacks on this country's beaches. From novelists to sailors to
oceanographers to divers, man's encounters with sharks have
produced a diverse body of gripping, often inspired writing by
great names in adventure literature. Along with 16 black-and-white
photos, selections feature a wide range of work with an emphasis on
thrills and chills, including Peter Matthiessen on the great white
shark, Edward Marriott on hunting man-eaters off Nicaragua, Richard
Fernicola's account of the 1916 shark attacks that inspired Peter
Benchley's Jaws, and Jacques Cousteau's studies of the creatures.
Adrenaline Books' search for the world's best and most exciting
stories has taken readers from the peaks of Everest to the jungles
of Papua, New Guinea to the battlefields of World War II. Now, the
editor of publishing's most successful adventure literature series
takes readers into the heart of organized crime. Some of our
culture's greatest literary talent has been drawn to this topic,
which taps into our culture's deepest preoccupations -- greed,
violence, desire. Mob features work from best-selling writers such
as Peter Maas, William Kennedy, Martin Cruz Smith, and Mario Puzo;
from acknowledged masters of the genre such as Nicolas Pileggi
(Wiseguy, Casino) and Joseph Pistone (Donnie Brasco); and from law
enforcement insiders and mobsters such as Sammy Giancana and Joseph
O'Brien.
In 1970, Chris Bonington and his now-legendary team of mountaineers
were the first climbers to tackle a big wall at extreme altitude.
Their target was the south face of Nepal's Annapurna: 12,000 feet
of steep rock and ice leading to a 26, 454-ft. summit. As serious
armchair climbers will tell you, Annapurna South Face is better
than all but a handful of equally gripping classics. One could also
argue that all that has happened in the big mountains in the past
30 years has come out of this expedition and out of this book.
Bonington and his team--most of whom subsequently died in the
mountains--represented a kind of "greatest generation" of modern
mountaineers. They pioneered a new, bolder approach to high
altitude climbing, and this book is about how they hit the big
time.
Stephen Venables and three companions made the first ascent of
Panchu Chuli V--a remote Himalayan peak on the borders of India,
Nepal and Tibet. A rappel anchor failed on the descent, pitching
Venables into a 300-foot fall. Crashing through the black night,
flung from rock to rock, he assumed that he was plunging to his
death. Against all odds he survived, but was left stranded 19,000
feet above a labyrinth of glaciers and snow slopes with two broken
legs, the threat of gangrene, and scant food or medical supplies.
If he was to return to his wife and son waiting at home some 5000
miles away, Venables knew he had to draw on his reserve of courage
and determination. The third Adrenaline Classic, A Slender Thread
is a spellbinding account of Venables' survival--and his intense
personal struggle to understand the risks he takes for the sake of
his insatiable passion for climbing. He comes as close to anyone to
answering the unanswerable question: Why do they do it?
Wild brings together the best writing about men and women fighting
for their lives in the wilderness, from Jon Krakauer's article on
which he based his bestseller Into the Wild, to Carl R. Raswan's
account of surviving raids, droughts, and sandstorms in the desert
with the Bedouins, to Joe Kane's description of terrifying
adventures on the Amazon. Other accounts include: Philipe Descola
telling of life with an isolated tribe of headhunters; Bill Bryson
describing his life-threatening but hilarious adventures along the
Appalachian Trail; and Eric Newby finding himself lost in some of
the world's most daunting terrain, the unmapped Hindu Kush.
In this pioneering anthology, Clint Willis presents 75 years of
great writing -- from Neil O'Dell to Jon Krakauer -- on the fabled
peaks. Here are stories of two British expeditions to Everest in
the 1920s; a piece on the 1939 K2 attempt that claimed four
climbers' lives; a firsthand account by the Sherpa who reached the
summit of Everest in 1953 with Edmund Hillary; the story of the
first successful American assault on K2 in 1978; a British
photographer's view of the calamitous 1996 storm on Everest; and
many more -- a cornucopia of mountaineering thrills for adventurous
readers.
Epic is a mountaineering term that evokes a sense of treacherous
disaster -- the climb that went wrong; fighting blinding snowstorms
and horrific avalanches; days spent tentbound, running low on food,
water, and oxygen; surviving broken bones and shattered spirits.
Editor Clint Willis has gathered the most exciting climbing
literature of the modern age into one cliff-hanging volume with 15
memorable accounts of legend-making expeditions to the world's most
famous peaks, often in the world's worst possible conditions.
Authors include Jon Krakauer, Greg Child, David Roberts, Alfred
Lansing, and others.
Firefighters have long been among the most admired men and women in
our culture, and recent events have shown how well-placed that
admiration is--adding fuel to our innate fascination with stories
about fire and the people who risk their lives to fight it. Some of
our best writers are drawn to the subject of firefighting, and over
the years they have created a rich body of literature. Fire
Fighters offers the most exciting and compelling stories from that
body of work, including accounts of devastating fires from New York
to Yellowstone, as well as smaller blazes that have turned
particularly ugly or dangerous. Selections include Jimmy Breslin's
eulogy for the men who died in the famous Chelsea fire, Norman
McLean on the Great Gulch forest fire that killed nine young
smokejumpers, John McPhee on fires in the Pine Barrens, Studs
Terkel's interview with a fire fighter, and riveting accounts of
the FDNY's role in the September 11 tragedy and its aftermath. 16
black-and-white photos are also featured.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
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