VIEW [EPUB KINDLE PDF EBOOK] Death in Mount Rainier National Park: Stories of Accidents and Foolhardiness on the Northwe

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Review Death in Mount Rainier National Park Stories of Accidents and Foolhardiness on the Northwest s Most Iconic Peak by Tracy Salcedo

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Each year almost two million visitors come to Mount Rainier National Park. If they don’t follow safety warnings, they may find themselves victims of a climbing accident, or face-to-face with a mountain lion, or stuck in the fog and snow on the Muir Snowfield, a place that is continually rated as one of America’s most dangerous hikes. Death in Mount Rainier National Park gathers some of the most dramatic stories of the more than 400 deaths that have occurred in the park’s history.

Name: Bob
Rating: 2.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Retelling of government reports and news stories
Date: Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 28, 2022
Review: The lack of even a single large scale map of the park makes it hard to understand the areas described. Seems like an obvious addition which should have been included. Detailed maps or even photos of the areas featured in more prominent incidents would have been useful but since not even a single large scale map was included obvioulsy detailed maps and photos is too much to expect.

The author is up front from the beginning she made no effort to get more information from families or victims. Its understandable she didn’t want to upset those hurt by the loss of a loved one, but this is a cop-out by the author for not doing the job of a writer. I’m sure the family/friends have been contacted numerous times by investigators and the media, because that is their job, to learn information. That should also be the author’ job even if it might seem hard. Perhaps some might appreciate the opportinity to add some information about their lost loved one so they aren’t just a dry cautionary tale as most are in this book as the author instead simply consolidated the work of other individuals from NPS reports, news stories, and other publications. Maybe if she did some intrerviews not only would the book be less dry but some incorrect details could be corrected. This book reads like a similar dry frustrating work, “Death in Rocky Mountain National Park”, by a different author, though at least in that book the author added some substantive thought and conjecture of their own. That added something, though without actually doing interviews themself they open themself up to not only missing an opprtunity to learn more and possibly correct an error, but they might have compounded it by speculating based on another’s error. This author avoids that but as a result we dont learn much. She could have simply included the source material verbatim and that would at least avoid the chance of something getting lost due to lack of context.

If one wants to see how to write a book of this type, check out “Colorado 14er Disasters”. Instead of simply collecting police reports and news stories of every Colorado 14er disaster, the author instead selects a small number of varied incidents, then does the job of an author of this type of book and collects all the soure information AND conducts further interviews and puts it all together, which results in an impactful book. I still think about those stories as a make plans and decisions in the outdoors.

I give this book 2 stars only because it has some value as a source for information.

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