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OverviewA PACIFIC NORTHWEST BOOKSELLERS ASSOCIATION BESTSELLER A fascinating look (Esquire) at the thrilling world of smokejumpers, the airborne firefighters who parachute into the most remote and rugged areas of the United States, confronting the growing threat of nature's blazes. Forest and wildland fires are growing larger, more numerous, and deadlier every year -- record drought conditions, decades of forestry mismanagement, and the increasing encroachment of residential housing into the wilderness have combined to create a powder keg that threatens millions of acres and thousands of lives every year. One select group of men and women are part of America's front-line defense: smokejumpers. The smokejumper program operates through both the U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management. Though they are tremendously skilled and only highly experienced and able wildland firefighters are accepted into the training program, being a smokejumper remains an art that can only be learned on the job. Forest fires often behave in unpredictable ways: spreading almost instantaneously, shooting downhill behind a stiff tailwind, or even flowing like a liquid. In this extraordinarily rare memoir by an active-duty jumper, Jason Ramos takes readers into his exhilarating and dangerous world, explores smokejumping's remarkable history, and explains why their services are more essential than ever before. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jason A Ramos , Julian Smith (Cornell University Ithaca) , John MacLean, Sir , Ned VaughnPublisher: HarperCollins Imprint: HarperCollins Edition: Library Edition Dimensions: Width: 18.30cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 16.80cm Weight: 0.249kg ISBN: 9781504625586ISBN 10: 1504625587 Publication Date: 31 May 2016 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Audio Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews"[A] touching and fast-paced memoir...written with precision and perspective, sometimes with a touch of poetry...A fun and valuable read. -- ""Washington Post"" A fascinating look at the men and women who devote their lives to this service. -- ""Esquire"" Compelling...A fast-paced, eye-opening read. -- ""Minneapolis Star Tribune"" Fast paced...Ramos is an expert guide through a fearful world...His passion is unmistakable. -- ""USA Today"" Interwoven with his exciting adventures on fires throughout the west, Jason educates the reader about the art of firefighting, the smokejumper culture, and the human tragedies associated with his twenty-six-year firefighting career. -- ""Bill Moody, NCSB jumper and base manager (retired) 1957-1989"" Jason Ramos tells of nature at its most savage, of two-thousand-degree heat and hurricane-force drafts, of heroic, sometimes lethal efforts to save the lives of people less prepared. Here you'll meet the people who fly between Heaven and Hell. And jump. -- ""Wayne van Zwoll, PhD, former special projects editor, Intermedia Outdoors"" Jason Ramos' Smokejumper is a rousing personal adventure story, a nutshell history of the great wildland fires, and insider's brief for making smokejumpers more relevant on today's fire line. -- ""John N. Maclean, author of Fire on the Mountain"" Ned Vaughn credibly narrates Ramos' first-person account... Vaughn's matter-of-fact tone maintains listener interest while allowing for the solemnity of death and injury to hit home. A passage in which Ramos ponders the feelings that a group of firefighters must have had before their deaths is especially moving. Listeners who know someone in a line of dangerous work may particularly appreciate hearing Ramos' take on his job. -- ""AudioFile"" Nothing can ever measure up to the sound of engines roaring as you step out into the cold air, into harm's way-to the smell of smoke and the endless beauty of the western mountains of America. Jason Ramos brings all that alive in this book. -- ""Bill Furman, CEO, Greenbrier Companies, Inc., Smokejumper NCSB 1962-1967"" You think your job's hard? Jason Ramos and his colleagues parachute into the wilderness in order to save nature from going up in flames. He takes readers into the world of smokejumping, which has become more important as drought in America becomes more widespread. -- ""Men's Journal (a 7 Best Books of the Month selection)""" Nothing can ever measure up to the sound of engines roaring as you step out into the cold air, into harm's way-to the smell of smoke and the endless beauty of the western mountains of America. Jason Ramos brings all that alive in this book. -- Bill Furman, CEO, Greenbrier Companies, Inc., Smokejumper NCSB 1962-1967 Jason Ramos' Smokejumper is a rousing personal adventure story, a nutshell history of the great wildland fires, and insider's brief for making smokejumpers more relevant on today's fire line. -- John N. Maclean, author of Fire on the Mountain Jason Ramos tells of nature at its most savage, of two-thousand-degree heat and hurricane-force drafts, of heroic, sometimes lethal efforts to save the lives of people less prepared. Here you'll meet the people who fly between Heaven and Hell. And jump. -- Wayne van Zwoll, PhD, former special projects editor, Intermedia Outdoors Interwoven with his exciting adventures on fires throughout the west, Jason educates the reader about the art of firefighting, the smokejumper culture, and the human tragedies associated with his twenty-six-year firefighting career. -- Bill Moody, NCSB jumper and base manager (retired) 1957-1989 Ned Vaughn credibly narrates Ramos' first-person account... Vaughn's matter-of-fact tone maintains listener interest while allowing for the solemnity of death and injury to hit home. A passage in which Ramos ponders the feelings that a group of firefighters must have had before their deaths is especially moving. Listeners who know someone in a line of dangerous work may particularly appreciate hearing Ramos' take on his job. -- AudioFile Compelling...A fast-paced, eye-opening read. -- Minneapolis Star Tribune [A] touching and fast-paced memoir...written with precision and perspective, sometimes with a touch of poetry...A fun and valuable read. -- Washington Post You think your job's hard? Jason Ramos and his colleagues parachute into the wilderness in order to save nature from going up in flames. He takes readers into the world of smokejumping, which has become more important as drought in America becomes more widespread. -- Men's Journal (a 7 Best Books of the Month selection) A fascinating look at the men and women who devote their lives to this service. -- Esquire Fast paced...Ramos is an expert guide through a fearful world...His passion is unmistakable. -- USA Today Author Information"Jason A. Ramos has devoted twenty-six years of his life to the fire service. His career began at the age of 17 as a volunteer with the Riverside County Fire Department, then progressed to wildland firefighting in Southern California. Now a smokejumper in his sixteenth season, he is based in Winthrop, WA, at the North Cascades Smokejumper Base, the ""birthplace of smokejumping."" Julian Smith is an award-winning travel writer whose work has appeared in Outside, National Geographic Adventure, National Geographic Traveler, Smithsonian, Wired, the Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times, among other publications. He is the author of guidebooks to El Salvador, Ecuador, Virginia, and the southwestern United States, and he has been honored by the Society of American Travel Writers for writing the best guidebook of the year. He lives with his wife and daughter in Portland, Oregon. John Norman Maclean, a longtime Washington journalist and prizewinning author, has published several books on wildland fire, including one about the 2006 Esperanza Fire in Southern California. In order to provide an accurate account of what firefighters go through, he has spent over a decade working with them, taking their training classes, and listening to their personal stories, calling it the best job he's ever had. He resigned from the Chicago Tribune in 1995, after thirty years of working as a reporter and editor, to write Fire on the Mountain, a critically acclaimed account of the 1994 fire on Storm King Mountain in Colorado, which took the lives of fourteen firefighters. The book, a national bestseller, received the Mountains and Plains Booksellers Award for the best nonfiction book of 1999. A History Channel documentary based on Fire on the Mountain won the Cine Master's Award for Excellence as the best documentary of 2003." 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