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By William Ashworth With a new afterword by the author A Northwest Reprints Title 1998. 6 x 9 inches. 192 pages. Glossary of mountaineering terms. ISBN 0-87071-523-2. Paperback, $17.95. |
In language vivid and precise, Ashworth describes as he and a coterie of climbing buddies attempt ascents of Eagle Cap, Pete's Point, Sacajaweja, and the Matterhorn. Climbing and camping in summer rain and winter blizzards, they face the challenge of the Wallowa high country and the humility it teaches. The book tracks the author's coming of age in the wilderness from a need to conquer mountains to an awareness of the redemptive qualities found in these wild places and the need to preserve the last of them. "We need wilderness not only for what it can do for us but for what it can mean to us," writes Ashworth. "We need the wilderness--to grow up in."
Twenty years after its original publication, the Oregon State University Press is pleased to introduce William Ashworth's classic memoir to a new generation of readers.
"An autobiography at once poetic, philosophical, and exciting . . . No one who reads [William Ashworth's] book can fail to understand what the wilderness means to all life. This is a work that prods the conscience, as well as superb entertainment."
--Publishers Weekly
About the Author
William Ashworth is the author of numerous books on the environment and natural history, including The Economy of Nature (Houghton Mifflin) and The Late, Great Lakes (Knopf). He lives in Ashland, Oregon.
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