John All has survived encounters with black mamba snakes, run-ins with wild jungle animals, and a brush with death in an icy tomb. No one knows the outer limits of our changing planet quite like him.
Buy Now From Amazon

John All has survived encounters with black mamba snakes, run-ins with wild jungle animals, and a brush with death in an icy tomb. No one knows the outer limits of our changing planet quite like him.

In May 2014, the mountaineer and scientist John All plunged into a crevasse in the Himalayas, a fall that all but killed him. He recorded a series of dramatic videos as he struggled to climb seven stories back up to the surface with a severely dislocated shoulder, internal bleeding, a battered face covered in blood, and fifteen broken bones--including six cracked vertebrae. The videos became a viral sensation, an urgent and gripping dispatch from one of the least-known extremes of the planet.

Yet this climb for his life is only the latest of John All's adventures in some of Earth's most hostile climates. He has also been chased by a wild hyena, scaled Everest, and narrowly missed being hit by an avalanche, all in pursuit of his true calling: the study of how we can master the challenge of our world's changing climate. Icefall is a thrilling adventure story and a report from the extremes of the planet, taking you to collapsing Andean glaciers, hidden jungles in Honduras, and the highest points on Earth. In this gripping account, our changing climate is not a matter of politics; it's a matter of life and death and the human will to survive and thrive in the face of it.


Similar Products

Ruthless River: Love and Survival by Raft on the Amazon's Relentless Madre de DiosA Speck in the Sea: A Story of Survival and RescueThe Stranger in the Woods: The Extraordinary Story of the Last True HermitAmerican Kingpin: The Epic Hunt for the Criminal Mastermind Behind the Silk RoadThe Last Good Heist: The Inside Story of The Biggest Single Payday in the Criminal History of the NortheastOn Trails: An ExplorationAstrophysics for People in a HurryDeep: Freediving, Renegade Science, and What the Ocean Tells Us About Ourselves