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(Mass Market Paperback - Reissue)
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On October 12, 1972, a plane carrying a team of young rugby players crashed into the remote, snow-peaked Andes. Out of the forty-five original passengers and crew, only sixteen made it off the mountain alive. For ten excruciating weeks they suffered deprivations beyond imagining, confronting nature head-on at its most furious and inhospitable. And to survive, they were forced to do what would have once been unthinkable ...
This is their story one of the most astonishing true adventures of the twentieth century.
A classic in the literature of survival.
More Reviews and RecommendationsPaul Piers Read is the author of numerous, critically acclaimed works of fiction and nonfiction, including A Patriot in Berlin (1996), Ablaze: The Story of the Heroes and Victims of Chernobyl (1993), On the Third Day (1989), and A Season in the West (1989). Mr. Read lives in London.
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December 07, 2008:
Alive, by Piers Paul Read, tells the story of a team of rugby players from Montevideo, Uruguay who are on their way to Santiago, Chile for a tournament. Their plane crashes in the Andes Mountains, and the book is about how they survived.
Alive shows how teamwork is so important in a team even if they are not playing a sport. For example, each team player had a specific role like how Roberto took care of most of the injured by cleaning their wounds. Every single player had to share a short supply of food. Leadership was another theme in the book. Antonio who is the captain of the team showed his leadership by sorting out the food and giving much-needed effort to save his team. The book also shows the importance of patience. The team suffered through starvation, freezing, and being helplessly lost for about ten weeks. They made it through that with out even thinking about giving up for one second.
This book is very suspenseful and very scary in a good way. People were dying left and right in this book. They died out of the blue. For instance, when an avalanche hit their camp two players died instantly. It happened so quickly.
Some reasons that people might find that they didn?t enjoy this book might be that it has so much description in it. There are certain parts of the book that are so slow that it loses some of your interest. The author also speeds through some parts, showing no description at all. He didn?t give a great description on how Nando and Canesso saved everyone. The plane crash that he described was good, but it took up about a page and I felt like it could have been longer and more descriptive.
This book is a book I think everyone should think about reading. It gets you thinking about what you would do if you were in that type of situation, and it teaches you a lot about survival.
If you were a young person you would not find this book to your liking. It has a lot of graphic parts. For instance, everyone has to eat his or her dead friends to keep from starving plus it is an extremely hard read.
A book that is extremely similar to this book is named Brian?s Winter. They are so alike in so many ways. If you like survival and a real thriller, then also read Brian?s Winter. The only difference is, one is fiction, and the other, non-fiction.
Overall I would rate this book a five star. It just is such a thriller and such a fun read for the most part. I would definitely recommend this book.
I Also Recommend: Brian's Winter (Brian's Saga Series #3).
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October 26, 2008:
Once I finally got into the book, this was a good story of survival. The men and women who crashed in the Andes had to overcome horrible situations -- injuries from the crash, an avalanche, and then the lack of food. What they did to survive was admirable, even if some may judge them harshly over their decision to eat the flesh of their dead friends.
That being said, though, the story moves so slowly, and the author's writing style is so staid, that it took me forever to actually feel like I was reading something worthwhile.
A good story, but it's a journey to plod through it.