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Women's Fiction
The Lost River : A Memoir of Life, Death, and Transformation on Wild Water

The Lost River : A Memoir of Life, Death, and Transformation on Wild Water

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $11.20
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 0 stars
Summary: MORE GREAT REVIEWS!
Review: "High adventure abounds in this book, but Bangs, in addition to writing brilliantly about dealing with whitewater and crocodile attacks, also does a superb job of describing the less glamorous side of things." --DENVER ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS

Rating: 0 stars
Summary: GREAT REVIEWS OF "THE LOST RIVER"
Review: "With straightforward storytelling, Bangs recounts a nearly 30-year obsession with rafting some of the swiftest, most dangerous waters on earth...Bangs tells his tale with the ease of a worldly relative who swoops in for Thanksgiving dinner and regales the table with stories that keep everyone's attention. Readers will especially enjoy the descriptions of Africa in which Bangs makes both the water and its wildlife bristle with peril..." --PUBLISHER'S WEEKLY

"Bangs's writing effectively captures the thrills, chills, and spills that make rafting such a popular, albeit sometimes dangerous, recreation. Highly recommended--" --LIBRARY JOURNAL

"It is persuasive, humorous, terrifying, and quite moving--a fine and essential addition to the growing body of adventure literature. One reads and feels the need to abandon it all and, like Huck, head downriver." --AMERCIAN WAY

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I want to run rivers
Review: Having navigated only a few rivers, none of them virgin, my interest was piqued when a former boss of mine told me about this guy Richard Bangs she knows. So I ... read the reviews, ...Suffice it to say I sat down with the book in hand, looked up roughly three hours later, and noticed I finished the book. The last book I recall which captivated me so was Dostoevsky's Notes From Underground.

In any event, the narrative is always fascinating if the prose is somewhat heavy-handed or purple at points.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I want to run rivers
Review: Having navigated only a few rivers, none of them virgin, my interest was piqued when a former boss of mine told me about this guy Richard Bangs she knows. So I ... read the reviews, ...Suffice it to say I sat down with the book in hand, looked up roughly three hours later, and noticed I finished the book. The last book I recall which captivated me so was Dostoevsky's Notes From Underground.

In any event, the narrative is always fascinating if the prose is somewhat heavy-handed or purple at points.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: What a superb book...
Review: I enjoyed the book tremendously. At times, I could even visualise the thrilling and dangerous moments down those wild rivers. Now I can't wait to watch the documentary.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: What a superb book...
Review: I enjoyed the book tremendously. At times, I could even visualise the thrilling, dangerous and frightening moments down those wild rivers. I shall now look forward to the documentary.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A thrilling, chilling experience!!
Review: I love this book! I had no idea that there are still places on this earth that no one has ever seen. Bangs' account of what he saw and experienced is unbelievable. "Heart of Darkness" meets Indiana Jones. Awesome!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Take It To the Beach! (Or Perhaps the River?)
Review: If you like adventure travel books and aren't interested in reading the fifteen thousandth book about Mt. Everest (enough already!), then you've got to read this book. A real winner. When's the movie?

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: reads like a good river trip - rambunctious & ribald
Review: Our body is largely composed of water. Richard Bangs shows us our attraction to water can be delightful, glorious, and sometimes fatal. "The Lost River" reads like a good river trip -- with rambunctious and ribald rapids and eddies of insight and human warmth. I enjoyed reading this book. It made me want to immediately drive to a put-in and get on a river, any river. I especially enjoyed the recounting of the dilemna of cultural exchange and how Bangs wrote to all the anthro

departments around the US and how Sobek's policy evolved. Paddle or die!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Lost River
Review: Richard Bangs and his Sobek rafting company were clearly the early trend setters in world-wide adventure travel. Those who enjoyed other books by Bangs including River Gods and Riding the Dragon's Back will enjoy this first-hand account of Bangs's early development as a world-class rafter including his teen adventures on the Potomac, his first summer working on the Colorado as a swamper and finally a guide through the Grand, and his first major first descent of the Omo River in Ethiopia. It was the Omo trip, which cost the members a total of $1400, where Sobek beat a well-financed National Geographic expedition by three months to what was then billed as the Mt. Everest of Whitewater, a distinction many now bestow on the Tsangpo in Tibet.

The first 2/3 of the book are well-written and include Sobek's tragic initial commercial trip ending with a client death in the first major rapid and later the death of Lee Greenwald, who Bangs met as a client on one of his Colorado trips. Greenwald had provided the financial backing to get the fledgling Sobek company off the ground, and became an accomplished river-runner under the mentorship of Bangs and one of his closest friends.

The book builds towards a climax of the much-anticipated exploratory descent of the Tekeze, a trip Bangs had promised to do with Greenwald two decades earlier and one he must complete to bring closure to Greenwald's premature death, but here the book begins to fall a little flat. The account of the Tekeze expedition reads more like a sequence of daily journal entries that could have used a bit more editing and the writing itself takes a slight downhill turn. There are daily accounts of setting up the satellite phone to transmit reports back to Microsoft's Mungo Park online travel magazine which Bangs was hired to create. For some reason, Bangs turns to language he must feel required to use to match the technology he is using and some of his phrases are a bit heavy handed:

...the tail of the wet season has made every tree and shrub burst into hectic leaf... it feels like we're in an oversized diorama, or the middle of an IMAX film--everything is exaggerated, the colors more brilliant than enhanced photos, or HDTV."

"...and every night I have slept fitfully, as though the night currents were arching through my cerebellum, conducting bytes and bits or worried thought."

"I contemplate pulling out my Minolta for a parting shot but instead grab my DC50 Kodak digital camera..."

Although the adventure aspects of the trip do not live up to the hype the reader anticipates, the story of Bangs coming to closure with the death of Greenwald provides a thread that keeps the story interesting.

While the book does not hold the reader with the drama of Into Thin Air or the Perfect Storm, as promised on the dust jacket, it is a revealing and deeply personal account of the joys and sorrows that come from modern exploration of uncharted territory. The book is a must-read for anyone who has enjoyed previous books by Bangs and those interested in the development of modern adventure travel, exploratory boaters, and those who want to learn how Sobek came to be.


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