Torrents As Yet Unknown
Daring Whitewater Ventures into the World's Great River Gorges
by Wickliffe W. Walker
This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app
1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date 12 Sep 2023 | Archive Date 18 Aug 2023
Steerforth Press | Steerforth
Talking about this book? Use #TorrentsAsYetUnknown #NetGalley. More hashtag tips!
Description
This fascinating history of daring whitewater explorers stands alongside classic works on mountaineering, outdoor survival, and extreme sports
Perfect for fans of Jon Krakauer’s Into Thin Air and Candice Millard’s River of the Gods
In 10 thrilling real-life adventure stories, pioneering whitewater explorer Wick Walker examines what lured a generation of incredibly daring pioneers into some of Earth’s most wondrous yet forbidding river canyons:
- below Victoria Falls on the Zambezi,
- the Great Bend of the Tsangpo in Tibet,
- Tiger Leaping Gorge on the Yangtze,
- the flanks of Mount Everest, and more
Loaded with great moments and personal stories, Wick details what these adventurers found there, and within themselves. The extraordinary characters, driven by different motives and visions, but united by their compulsion to seek the unknown and the pulse of free-flowing water, are as remarkable as the daunting geography and conditions they confront.
Whitewater sport today stands side-by-side with mountaineering in participation and public attention, yet it has lagged in generating its own literature. Torrents As Yet Unknown will help fill that gap for readers interested in human drama played out against great natural challenges.
Mountaineering history is deep and its literature rich, but whitewater adventurers approach and experience the same forbidding terrain from a different vantage, between the steep walls of their canyons and atop powerful torrents of cascading water.
Advance Praise
“Page-turning adventure tales from an experienced, knowledgeable guide.”
--Kirkus Reviews
“Wick has served up a series of first-rate adventure tales covering the major whitewater explorations of the late 20th Century. Running the rapids is a concrete and straightforward task, although rarely as simple and easy. While following the paddlers downriver, we also explore their thoughts and emotions.”
--Coastal CaNEWS
“A river is a liquid mountain, though you may have never thought of them this way, until reading Walker’s dramatic, highly-researched homage to venturing into the unknown. Like Into Thin Air, this book takes you to places from which there may be no return. The shock for those who’ve never paddled a stream will be that rivers are so alive, voice-filled, dangerous, and welcoming. Rivers are places, Walker writes, where the current 'flows but one direction — into the future.' Walker’s experiences as an elite paddler, meditative and enormously dramatic, will have river veterans nodding in agreement and surprise. I loved the journey."
--Doug Stanton, author of the #1 New York Times bestseller, Horse Soldiers
"It's not often that an all-time great explorer, paddling pioneer, and expedition leader writes an all-time great book on his life's obsession. But Wick Walker has done it and it's a doozy. This compendium of whitewater first descents is a must-read for every adventure-lover -- you don't need to be a kayaker or raft guide to feel the power of these stories."
--Brian Castner, author of Disappointment River: Finding and Losing the Northwest Passage
"Superbly written and very, very gripping . . . Torrents As Yet Unknown brought back to me rich memories, especially of Mike Jones, one of the great adventurers of our time."
--Sir Chris Bonington, CVO, CBE, DL, mountaineer and author of more than a dozen books about his adventures, including Annapurna South Face
"Wickliffe Walker’s Torrents As Yet Unknown is an important contribution to the literature of exploration and the history of whitewater river running. But it is also a fascinating study of character — of the irrepressible imagination and sheer audacity of those who seek out the wildest places, who make a life of honing the skills needed to navigate the unknown at the extreme limit of human survivability. As I read, I found myself repeatedly murmuring, 'You can’t make this stuff up.' From kayakers trying to maneuver on the Blue Nile while shooting attacking crocodiles with a pistol, to paddlers attempting to kayak from just below Everest’s Base Camp, to Chinese scholars sealing themselves in closed capsules and asking to be shoved off into the ferocious cataclysm of the Yangtze River’s Tiger Leaping Gorge. Walker knows the territory: he’s a soldier and explorer who has led expeditions into Tibet’s mythic Tsangpo Gorge, and singlehandedly paddled the first descents of many of Pakistan’s whitewater rivers. His book had my pulse racing. And I kept thinking, 'That’s why we love rivers, and that’s why the greatest push the limits.'"
--Peter Heller, author of The Dog Stars, The River, and The Guide.
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781586423728 |
PRICE | US$27.00 (USD) |
PAGES | 224 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
Torrents As Yet Unknown: Daring Whitewater Ventures into the World’s Great River Gorges
Wickliffe W. Walker
Rivers “remain to this day places of spiritual wonder, of geographic enigma, of hidden danger and awesome beauty. The rivers don’t carve only the bedrock; they shape the men and women who confront them as well, men and women frequently as relentless and complicated as the rivers they explore.”
Author Wickliffe W. Walker discusses the history, importance and exhilaration of exploring the rivers. “There are rivers all over the world except Antarctica. They make their way through rugged mountain ranges and clefts in the terrain like arteries through Earth’s body, gorges and canyons too inaccessible and hostile to serve as waterways for migration, trade or conquest.“ He also shares information on the brave men/women who traveled the rivers. I cannot say they conquered for a river is never conquered. There are maps to place the rivers in perspective.
Wow! That could easily be my entire review.
The author is a lot braver than I am, although I find myself strangely interested in rock climbing and whitewater- sports that I would NEVER do but find strangely compelling..
Written in an easy manner and we discover a lot more about extreme sports. Researched but obviously lots of personal stories and life experiences, which is where I feel the book really shines.
I felt stressed out reading some of the parts of this book (its all good, I got over it LOL). I love that I can live these experiences through the eyes of someone who is on site living it.
I am a huge fan of mountain climbing books, in which people tell tales of going UP into the unknown. It was a fun change of pace to read about whitewater rafters and kayakers who essentially do the same thing going DOWN! White water rafting is something about which I have almost no knowledge, but Walker does a good job conveying the danger in each of the runs. He intricately describes what it's like to head out on an unknown river and battle the huge force of nature that is water. Read for extreme adventure and harrowing tales of human accomplishment!
Readers who liked this book also liked:
Thomas Fargnoli
Christian, General Fiction (Adult), Religion & Spirituality