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Maclean's words often connected with me at the gut level. Maclean does not resort to cheap sentimentality, as his words are often simple, but with an incredible depth of meaning that few authors can match.Maclean sought to understand Mann Gulch and the tragedy, and his quest becomes the reader's.
People feared Maclean would die on the slopes of Mann Gulch, as a previous fire scientist, Harry Gisborne, had done while researching the area himself.I highly recommend this book. He communicates the depth of his own desire to understand what happened, particularly in those infamous few minutes that separated life from death for eleven men, though death was tragically slow for two more.
This book grabs you, by the heart as well as the mind. Nevertheless, this is no melodrama.
It's a powerful story to begin with, but adding Maclean's talent makes it a must-read for everyone. I found myself emotionally touched by the stories of those caught in the flames or narrowly escaping them.
I found myself flipping back to re-read certain sections for their impact.
However, the book was in very good condition upon arrival. I purchased this book as a gift and have not yet had a chance to read it.
His goodwill and charm reveal themselves to us throughout the narrative.But the book is uneven. Again, this may well be because MaCLean did not oversee the final form of the book.MaCLean was obviously a talented writer and regardless of the book's flaws, I appreciate the efforts he made in trying to tell us this story. Although this book at times comes close to greatness, it never quite gets there. Furthermore, MaClean has lived a long life after starting out as a woodsman, going on to be a successful teacher and then writer. He tries to draw meaning between the two, but because he hasn't really established his wife as an important element of the story the result seems hurried and rushed. As MaCLean works his way through his material and interviews various participants and experts he exposes the culture of the deep woods and the life of some of the people who live there. MaCLean can also be engaging and humorous and I thought how wonderful it must have been to have been his student, neighbor or friend and had the opportunity to sit with him and have a chat.
MaCLean is also not successful in fully reconciling the death of his wife with those of the firefighters. These are certainly vital aspects of the story, but they're drawn out and although MaClean competently breaks this information down for the reader it disrupts the book's flow and becomes at times --to me at least--quite boring.
In searching for the answers and the reasons for the fire, MaCLean is also staring his own impending death in the face and trying to come to some resolution about what life means and what value it holds if one dies young or in contrast, such as MacClean, lives to an old age. There are two sections of the book in which the story gets caught up in long detailed explainations of distances between inviduals at the fire, rates of movement per hour, the angle of the terrain, and scientific analysis.
The Mann Gulch Fire, which resulted in the deaths of 12 smokejumpers (firefighters who parachute from planes)and a park ranger, is certainly a compelling topic and Norman MaCLean seems particularly qualified to tell us the story, having fought fires himself as a young man in the deep woods of the west. Perhaps this is because it was published posthumously and at least to some degree, however small, is not the finished product MaCLean himself would have presented as a final, complete work.
It made me want to visit Mann Gulch and spend a day there wondering about the fire myself. This fact adds an extra depth to the story, that might otherwise be lacking if it were told by a young man.
We learn something about America in the process.
Maclean's background as son of a devout Presbyterian minister, his talents for relating the ordinary to the divine, and his humility, enable him to tackle such deep subject matter with respect and solemnity. I give the work 4 out of 5 stars (rather than the almost deserving 5) only because, had he lived to finish it, it would have been as refined as his other published works.(Spoiler Alert: don't read any further if you would like to discover for yourself by reading the book.).Common for all humanity is the desire to live and be remembered, though we all will meet our unique end. Maclean relates the inevitability of dying, especially the anguish of dying young, to the passion of the Christ. This book is a study by Norman Maclean and associates on the circumstances and details of the Mann Gulch disaster of 1949 where all but three USFS Smokejumpers died in a "blowup" wildfire. As Christians honor Christ's sacrifice for us, Maclean so honors the tragic deaths of these young men whose last throes were played out amidst the passion of a mountain wildfire. His background in literature brings the tragic events of the fire and actions of these young men to life in heartbreaking detail. Maclean is able to lend unique perspective and commentary to the lives and deaths of these young men because as a native of Montana, he was also in the USFS and fought forest fires during the early 20th century. The revelations from this study serve to ensure that these men did not die needlessly and that lessons are learned that have saved (and will save) lives of future firefighters.I'll not spoil the read for you by saying that there is a higher theme that slowly comes to light during the course of the story, a theme that hits like a ton of bricks in the final pages of the book.
His son, John Maclean, is following in his footsteps and has three excellent books which you should read if you are interested in wildland fires and the dangers faced by those who fight them. Reading this book is as close to being there as we will ever get - and Norman Maclean is the perfect author to combine factual reporting with the emotional conflicts of men facing death.
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