Search Recent Posts The Girl Who Kicked The Hornets Nest Combo TV SpotWatch The Spy Next Door Free Cats Dogs The Revenge Of Kitty Galore LEGEND OF THE GUARDIANS THE OWLS OF GAHOOLE NEW TRAILER HD Toothless Solange Dancingin The Dark Call Of Duty Black Ops Review Skyline Movie The Dragon With The Girl Tattoo By Adam Roberts Other Blogs Movie CoastMovie Probe The Movie Store Tags 127 HoursA Nightmare On Elm Street Alice In Wonderland Alpha And Omega Avatar: Special Edition Babies Brooklyn's Finest Burlesque Case 39 Catfish Cats & Dogs: The Revenge Of Kitty Galore Charlie St. Cloud Chloe City Island Clash Of The Titans Conviction Cop Out Cyrus Date Night Daybreakers Dear John Death At A Funeral Despicable Me Devil Diary Of A Wimpy Kid Dinner For Schmucks Due Date Easy A Eat Pray Love Edge Of Darkness Exit Through The Gift Shop Extraordinary Measures Fair Game Faster For Colored Girls From Paris With Love Furry Vengeance Get Him To The Greek Get Low Going The Distance Green Zone Greenberg Grown Ups Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Part 1 Hereafter Hot Tub Time Machine How To Train Your Dragon Hubble 3D I Am Love Inception Inside Job Iron Man 2 It's Kind Of A Funny Story Jackass 3-D Joan Rivers: A Piece Of Work Jonah Hex Just Wright Kick-Ass Killers Knight & Day Leap Year Legend Of The Guardians: The Owls Of Ga'Hoole Legion Let Me In Letters To God Letters To Juliet Life As We Know It Lottery Ticket Love And Other Drugs MacGruber Machete Mao's Last Dancer Marmaduke Megamind Morning Glory My Name Is Khan My Soul To Take Nanny McPhee Returns Oceans Our Family Wedding Paranormal Activity 2 Percy Jackson & The Olympians: The Lightning Thief Piranha 3D Please Give Predators Prince Of Persia: The Sands Of Time Ramona And Beezus Red Remember Me Repo Men Resident Evil: Afterlife Robin Hood Salt Saw 3D Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World Secretariat Sex And The City 2 She's Out Of My League Shrek Forever After Shutter Island Skyline Solitary Man Splice Step Up 3-D Takers Tangled The A-Team The American The Back-Up Plan The Book Of Eli The Bounty Hunter The Crazies The Expendables The Ghost Writer The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet's Nest The Girl Who Played With Fire The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo The Karate Kid The Kids Are All Right The Last Airbender The Last Exorcism The Last Song The Last Station The Losers The Next Three Days The Other Guys The Runaways The Secret In Their Eyes The Social Network The Sorcerer's Apprentice The Spy Next Door The Switch The Town The Twilight Saga: Eclipse The Warrior's Way The Wolfman To Save A Life Tooth Fairy Toy Story 3 Tyler Perry's Why Did I Get Married Too? Unstoppable Valentine's Day Vampires Suck Waiting For Superman Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps When In Rome Winter's Bone You Again You Will Meet A Tall Dark Stranger Youth In Revolt | Marketplace | 127 Hours Movie Tie In Between A Rock And A Hard Place No descriptionCommentsClaris Landevos says... Who couldn't be fascinated with the story of a young man, trapped for days in a dry canyon in the middle of the Utah badlands, eventually cutting off his own arm and walking out to be rescued?That basic story is the reason I bought this book.Having read a good deal of the stories in the newspaper about Ralston and his ordeal, I certainly wasn't looking for more narrative like most of the people who reviewed this book.I knew pretty much WHAT had happened.I was more interested in the WHY and the HOW.This book provided that in spades. What ultimately turned me off to this book, and the reason that my copy is now sitting in a used book store and not on my bookshelf, is because of two overriding factors that took away from both the narrative and the discussions of Ralston's past and his outdoor philosophy.The first thing that put me off to this book is the fact that Ralston never learns anything.Sure, he laments the time with friends and family that he has not valued as much as he should have and the time he should have spent with other people instead of climbing peaks and going out alone into the wilderness.But at the end of it all he doesn't change.Once he has recovers and overcomes the mechanical problems of climbing again he goes right back to solo trips and dangerous climbs to 14,000+ feet. The second reason this book only earned three stars in my opinion is the same as many others here.Length!So much time was spent on his prior achievements, so many pages spent telling us his philosophy and who he looked up to, and (most of all) all the myriad other times he should have died but didn't.And yet, after all that exposition and history I came away feeling like he was simply building up how great he was.Against his own advice in the book, he was defining himself by what he did. All that aside, I certainly don't regret purchasing the book or spending the time to read it.It was an interesting look into the mind of the Gen-X, Neo-Hippy (forgive the term) similar to that which pervades the increasingly common thinking on the environment and the outdoors.And the narrative of his entrapment and ultimate escape is definitely worth the time. Posted on August 13, 2011 Steffanie Moronta says... I agree with the last reviewer. The fact that Aron Ralston used poor judgment, i.e. hiking alone and not telling anyone where he was, only makes his story more compelling. Hasn't everyone made a huge mistake that leads to a painful, regretful plight? Calling the media sensationalistic,in this instance, is just plain silly--amputing one's arm in order to save one's life IS a sensational, highly unusual event. I don't think the media or Aron is making it anything more than what it was. The charge that Aron is self-promoting is just as ridiculous. After you read the book, you will see that Ralston is a humble person with great integrity and strength. He is simply telling his own, true, unbelievable story. Bottomline, this book is incredibly well-written, moving and not to be missed. Posted on August 13, 2011 Perry Landefeld says... I've a feeling we have not heard the last of Aron Ralston, but it won't be long before we do. His narration of the nearly fatal idiocy that cost him his right hand is interspersed with flashback stories of even greater follies accomplished during previous wilderness "adventures." We are regaled with accounts of running barefoot through the snow with a bear in pursuit, leaping fully clothed into a raging Colorado River for no apparent reason, rock climbing (in sandals, no less) over, and then falling into, a patch of prickly pear cactus, having his footwear fall apart midway up the face of a 2,000-foot sheer granite wall - these apparently recounted in hopes of showing what an accomplished (or at least, passionate) outdoorsman he is - are not the stuff of legend, or inspiration, or courage; they are the tales of a bonehead in search of a Darwin Award. An Hero. I continually found myself wondering why anybody who suffered such an unbroken string of disasters brought about by poor decision-making, unpreparedness, naivete, or downright pigheadedness would be set up as an inspirational character (or why anyone would seek to publicize their own stupidity thus); but then I remember Timothy Treadwell and his ardent supporters and followers. In any event, the straw that broke this camel's back was Aron's reviling us with an event he saw as amusing and clever: he and his friends composed a "joke" distress note and put it in an empty vodka bottle which they then threw into Havasupai Creek, to flow over Mooney falls, to perhaps "be found by a jet skier in Lake Mead." Right. More likely broken glass discovered by the waders barefoot downstream. Oh, I could go on and on.. and Aron does. A litany of grief and stupidity haunts this guy and anyone who does business with him. He manages to lose not only his ice axe on one winter ascent, but the team's only map as well, resulting in abandonment of their summit bid in lieu of an emergency hunt for a way off the mountain. I think of the disaster that befell the Everest climbers in Krakauer's "Into Thin Air", or the mystery of what happened to Irvine and Mallory detailed in "Ghosts of Everest" and innumerable other actually heroic stories, of excruciating ordeals, unbelievable fortitude and character displayed by many climbers and outdoorsfolk, and then I think of this clown losing his team's map while traipsing around on a 14,000 foot mountain, for cripe sake. I think about this jamoke going out in the wintertime to scale Colorado's mountains without proper clothing or food, or common sense or respect for the nature in general and mountains in particular. He hikes up mountains in the wintertime but has not the sense to put his chocolate bars or water in an inside pocket where they won't freeze, then bemoans the fact as if it were some giant life lesson Gaia bestows only on hardy souls (who venture forth thus unencumbered with brains). Feh. Do yourself a favor and skim the tripe. There are perhaps 100 readable pages in the book, and don't swallow any of Aron's stultifying psuedo-religious gobbledygook or cerulean blue prose-poems; it's mostly blather perpetrated by a not-too-bright adrenaline junkie who very well could be the next famous bear scat. Posted on August 14, 2011 Earline Bertao says... I feel like an 800-pound boulder going in to write anything less than an overwhelmingly positive review of "Between a Rock and a Hard Place".How many people have said they'd give their right arm to have their memoirs reach the bestseller list?Well, outdoorsman Aron Ralston actually did that.Who, then, am I to judge his writing style? There's no listed ghostwriter, and you can believe Ralston did structure and write the whole book himself.A Carnegie Mellon grad with five years as a mechanical engineer, and well versed in outdoor literature, Ralston comes off as a talented writer (one would hope, however, that he'd avoid the inevitable trap of making his next book a thinly veiled roman-a-clef about a trapped rock climber).However, the book is bogged down by two authorial -- if not editorial -- decisions: First, the writing style is very technical, and therefore dense.I'm not an outdoorsman; probably the most extreme things I've done in my adult life are to climb the Diamond Head on Oahu, which really just involved walking up a lot of stairs; and an extremely little bit of caving outside of Rapid City, South Dakota.Although Ralston cites to Jon Krakauer as a writing inspiration, he lacks Krakauer's ability to make the extraordinary seem achievable.I felt I could climb partway up Everest after reading "Into Thin Air".After "Between a Rock and a Hard Place", I didn't even think I could ride a bicycle again. Second, the alternating chapters.I understand the structure of the book: in order to tell his whole life story, while keeping the suspense going, Ralston only describes his ordeal in odd-numbered chapters.The balance of the book leads us first through his outdoors life, and then through the rescue effort that hastened his escape from Blue John Canyon and saved his life.I found myself fidgeting during the earlier anecdotes.While the black bear pursuit and the snow avalanche were gripping adventures, the rest of the tales really didn't add much to my enjoyment of the book -- and see again my complaint about the overly technical writing.Ralston climbed over 40 mountains before the rock climbing accident; he describes every single climb, and I couldn't tell any of them apart when he was done. I've already recommended this book to others.I admire Ralston's attention to detail, his clinical look back at his own mental state during six days of captivity, and his sense of humor -- the line about his left arm on the book's final page is remarkable.I don't know if I'd be able to go back and watch the videotape I'd made of myself, had I been the one pinned under that boulder -- and Ralston has clearly watched that footage multiple times.This is clearly a man of extraordinary emotional strength.However, his book could have been shorter and perhaps a little more user friendly -- and that's absolutely the worst you can say about it. Posted on August 14, 2011 Erika Markwell says... Aron's story is intelligent, sincere, warm and at many times, funny. As amazing as the story of his ordeal is, what is nearly as amazing is that something this well-written was created by the person it involved, not a ghost writer. It is nothing short of fine literature, not to mention an obviously compelling story. Aron inspires us all. He shows us that a motivated person can save himself, and that the force of life can beat unbelievable odds against the force of death. Posted on August 15, 2011 Sona Vecker says... The story seems compelling: an unfortunate hiker has his arm pinned by a boulder and must cut off his own arm to rescue himself.It is a terrible thing for anybody to lose part of a limb (indeed, ask any of the many Iraq War casualties), and we like to look for some positive outcome from such a loss.I read this book because I was curious what changes such an experience would cause in one's approach to life.I was left disappointed and angry. Aron Ralston survived what should have been a life-changing experience, yet came away from it the same arrogant, self-centered boy as before.The reader hopes and prays that the tiresome egotism of the early chapters is simply a literary device, designed to set the stage for Ralston's transformation.Instead, the egotism remains the constant in his life, both before and after his accident. Although Ralston claims to have had a revelation while pinned behind a boulder -- finally understanding it is not what you have done, but how you have lived -- this revelation is discarded the moment he survives.Once healthy again, Ralston returns to stupid, dangerous activities (e.g., solo winter ascents) with no consideration for those he loves.He has learned nothing.He was given the opportunity to make a major change in his life.He ignored the chance to mature and act responsibly, and returned to reckless behavior that only puts his family and friends at risk of heart ache. Ralston begins his story by documenting his many stupid mistakes that almost cost him his life.He makes winter ascents of Colorado peaks without spare outer gloves.He pushes himself to the point of hallucinating, putting himself and his partner at risk.He goes solo canyoneering and mountain biking without a first aid kit.He ignores advice of a park ranger and goes hiking in inappropropriate snow conditions, and almost is attacked by a bear.He puts himself and friends at risk skiing in areas with a high risk of avalanche.Despite his supposed training in search and rescue, his ignores the first rule (always let somebody know where you are going and when you should be back). Yet, Ralston seems baffled when his mother doesn't want to hear the details of his latest in a long series of scrapes with death.Perhaps she cares about him.Perhaps she wonders why he insists on always doing things the dangerous way.Perhaps she wonders how he can do these things to her. There are many ways to immerse one self in the great outdoors, and there are many ways to test one self.Many a young person has thought that placing themselves in life-threatening situations is the ultimate test.Luckily, most of us outgrow this stage.We start to recognize the value of life.We start to recognize the devastation that our deaths would have on our family and friends.We mature. There are many, many skilled mountaineers in Colorado.Many have the requisite skills to complete solo winter ascents, but most forego the activity because it is stupid.There are too many variables, and the odds of dying are too high.Ralston fancies himself a Super Man because he is dumb enough to go on winter solo ascents.Despite repeated narrow escapes, it never occurs to Ralston that he is being cavalier with his life, the lives of his friends, and the emotions of his family and friends. The baffling thing about Ralston's history is that he never matured.He had plenty of occasions for reflection, and he had friends endeavoring to change his perspective.Yet, he continued on his own little self-centered journey.He wanted to be bigger than life, no matter what the cost. Indeed, the bizarre thoroughness of his photo-documentation of his struggle attests to his dreams of grandeur.If he lived, he was going to be famous.If he died, he was going to be a legend.Ralston would have us believe that he was fighting for his life on the hike out, yet he never even considered leaving behind his video camera and digital still camera. At some point in Ralston's effort to show that he was the prime mover in the many good times with his friends, he recounts making fun of 1980s music.I found this ironic, in that Ralston is the embodiment of the 1980s Me Generation.It is all about Aron, without any consideration for anybody else. Do not buy this book.To do so is to encourage a reprehensible approach to life.To do so is to reward a selfish little child.To do so is to buy into a false hero.To do so is to support the extreme of self-centeredness.To do so is to cast a foreseeable event (based on poor preparation and a belief of invincibility) as an unavoidable accident.Do not buy this book. Mr. Ralston was given an opportunity to see the light and to mature, but squandered that chance in exchange for celebrity.If he continues with his solo winter climbing, I fear that he will eventually pay the ultimate price for his contorted self-image and lack of judgment. Posted on August 15, 2011 Deidre Sturgis says... Aron Ralston has had an admittedly unique experience. He had to amputate his own hand to save his life. What is missing amidst all the hoopla and notoriety surrounding this amazing story is that he engineered his own predicament through a combination of stupidity and hubris. The actual circumstances leading up to and through his ordeal are interesting and, at time, riveting. However, the author takes what should be a magazine sized story , and expands it to book length by padding it with the boring and suffocatingly self indulgent "story of my life". Well, the story of Aron Ralston's life is one all too familiar in the world of "me first." I finally had to skip long passages of "hislove affair with himself" to get to the heart of the story. My suggestion: wait for the Reader's Digest version. Posted on August 16, 2011 Luella Mcelreavy says... I saw the Dateline NBC special about Aron's ordeal when it aired 3 years ago. I was stunned, as I'm sure everyone who saw it was, and I made a mental note to read this book. But here it is, 2007, and I've only just now gotten around to it. I don't think this book is all good or all bad - I share many of the same opinions of the others who have reviewed it. One thing I will say is I don't think it's possible to be completely objective and review the BOOK alone, separate from "reviewing" Aron as a person. But when someone writes their autobiography, I think they put themselves out there for judgment, so I won't attempt to make that separation. First, the writing style. Yes, there are many instances where the descriptions are incredibly overwritten, where you can almost see his conscious effort to make his writing seem "poetic." And his penchant for $2 vocabulary words couldn't be more annoying. But for me there was a huge difference between the writing in the "background" chapters (overwritten and over-detailed) and the writing about the entrapment itself, which is nothing short of vivid, stunning, and remarkable. His ability to put you right there in that canyon with him is amazing. He really is a very good storyteller, and I found myself very intrigued and delighted on numerous occasions to read the unique ways that he describes things. As others have said, there is way too much technical detail, particularly when he's recounting his past outings. In those passages I found that even with pages of description, I still had a hard time picturing exactly what he was talking about because I'm not a climber (or a skier, or a white-water rafter, or a canyoneer, or a rappeller or a...). The background chapters do get annoying, and one does get the sense that he's relishing the opportunity to brag to the world. Make no mistake about it, his ego is enormous. But I also understand the necessity of those chapters. People can say that the book should have just been an account of the entrapment, but you couldn't have fully gotten into the head of this guy without knowing his past. He definitely could have used a better editor, though. Those chapters are just too long and too detailed. Now to Aron. When you read the book you find out that he has faced numerous life and death situations prior to what happened in Blue John Canyon (most of which are not "bad luck" but rather his own risk-taking and poor decision-making). And the interesting thing about him is that he seems to genuinely feel the fear and terror in those moments when death is imminent. But it never seems to stop him from going back for more. That's why reading his story didn't make me think, "wow, this guy really lives life to the fullest." Rather, I felt like I was reading the sad story of someone who is as addicted to adrenaline as a heroine addict is to his drug. I think that Aron will undoubtedly die in the middle of one of his "adventures," but I don't think he'd have it any other way. It makes me wonder if this guy will ever be capable of feeling "alive" via the simple pleasures in life, or if he will always have to be hanging off the side of a mountain or riding raging rapids to experience true joy. It's kind of sad. Another thing that comes through very clearly about Aron is that he is extremely intelligent and talented. Not only does he have incredible outdoor accomplishments, but it's also clear that he is a very talented engineer, as evidenced by his thought process while he's trapped and the various tactics he designs and tries for getting out. Plus, he plays the piano and as we see in this book, he's a much better than average writer. It would seem that he's a true Renaissance Man. But as the saying goes, there's a fine line between genius and insanity. Which side is Aron on? Well, I guess you can decide for yourself. It's not entirely clear whether Aron "gets it" at the end because after the rescue there's only a few token pages dedicated to what happened later. Personally I would have preferred much less backstory and more about his recovery, and life and thoughts after the accident. But he wrote this book relatively soon after the ordeal, so maybe the benefit of more perspective will change him. If he's not dead first. I'll probably hang on to this book but if I ever pick it up to read it again, I'll definitely skip the "I'm the greatest outdoorsman who ever lived" chapters. Bottom line, read this book. You won't regret (or forget) it. Posted on August 20, 2011 Katlyn Vera says... This is a wonderful book by a clearly remarkable individual.Ralston successfully intertwines prior experiences with his accident in Utah, to give the reader tremendous insight into the many wilderness experiences that shaped him. At times, the book gives fairly detailed technical renderings of mountaineering experiences, and these passages can be difficult.However, these sections can be easily 'skimmed through' by the non-mountaineer, and most probably savored by those with more hiking/climbing experience. What makes this book valuable to every reader, including ones who may never face seemingly insurmountable physical challenges, is Ralston's -Joseph Campbell inspired- message of "follow your bliss."It will be the unusual reader who does not finish this book feeling as if they must closely examine their own life, and the course it is taking. Posted on August 21, 2011 Zofia Surette says... I admire Aron's strength, persistence, and drive. Yet within about 40 pages of this book his bravado and obsession with near-death experiences became annoying and tedious. One of the most memorable parts of the book comes when he reveals that two of his friends, both experienced climbers, stopped talking to him after his reckless behavior contributed to the near death of all three of them. Yet, still Aron did not learn from that painful event. He still continues to put himself into danger time and again. Another telling part of the book comes when he describes a conversation he has with an expert mountaineer. Aron is bragging to him about his climbs, and the expert mountaineer bruskly says that he doesn't do solo climbs. It is a free country, and therefore Aron can spend his life doing whatever he wants, he can even repeatedly brush with death. However, the public does not have to romanticize him for this. To call his entrapment a "tragedy" isn't accurate. After all, that wasn't even the deadliest situation he'd gone through in the book. He'd seen rocks fall, had expert mountaineers tell him to always beware of falling rocks. Yes, it was bad luck that this time rocks fell on him, but to say the event was "unexpected" really isn't true, either. The odds just played out and he was there. Sad, yes. Tragic, not really. Yet even after losing his arm, he still has learned nothing. He continues to take chances and tempt fate. This really is the same mindset that heroin and gambling addicts have. The only difference is that Aron doesn't break any laws. So take this tale for what it is: a list of Aron's achievements, and a tale about someone who risks his life time after time and eventually gets into a situation he can't get out of scot-free. Posted on August 25, 2011 Leave a Comment |
No description