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The Darkest White

A Mountain Legend and the Avalanche That Took Him

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"Eric Blehm offers an insightful perspective on how Craig Kelly became the effortless icon that we all revered as well as sobering details of how his heroic journey tragically ended. The Darkest White is a must read, not just for fans of snowboarding, but for anyone looking for inspiration from an unlikely hero."—Tony Hawk

From Eric Blehm, the bestselling author of The Last Season and Fearless, comes an extraordinary new book in the vein of Into the Wild, the story of the legendary snowboarder Craig Kelly and his death in the 2003 Durrand Glacier Avalanche—a devastating and controversial tragedy that claimed the lives of seven people.

On January 20, 2003, a thunderous crack rang out and a violent tide of snow barreled down the northern Selkirk Mountains in British Columbia, Canada, burying thirteen skiers and snowboarders. Among them was Craig Kelly—"the Michael Jordan of snowboarding"—a world champion who had propelled the sport into the mainstream before walking away from competitions to rekindle his passion in the untamed alpine wilds of North America.

The Darkest White tells the story of Craig Kelly's life, an extraordinary and inspiring odyssey of a latchkey kid whose athletic prowess and innovations revolutionized winter sports, carried him around the globe, and pushed him into increasingly extreme backcountry environments. It is also a definitive, immersive account of how snowboarding grew from a minor Gen X cult hobby to Olympic centerpiece and a billion-dollar business full of feuds and rivalries. This mesmerizing tribute is a cautionary portrait of the mountains, of the allure and the glory they offer, and of the avalanches they unleash with unforgiving fury.

"The most unremittingly exciting book of nonfiction I have come across in recent years. I found myself reading late into recent nights wholly transfixed by every paragraph, every word."—Simon Winchester, New York Times Book Review

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 27, 2023
      Bestseller Blehm (Fearless) charts in this comprehensive biography how snowboarding pioneer Craig Kelly (1966–2003) became the sport’s “first true professional.” Kelly grew up “a latchkey kid of divorced parents from small-town Mount Vernon, Washington,” and began snowboarding in the early 1980s. His skill led to sponsorships, fans, and four world champion titles, but he stopped competing before snowboarding became an Olympic sport in 1998, preferring to board just “for the experience.” In 2003, Kelly and six others died on Canada’s Durrand Glacier during an avalanche, and Blehm goes to great lengths to recreate what happened. He hired Ruedi Beglinger, Kelly’s guide on that fateful day, to take him on the mountains where Kelly died and persuaded the tight-lipped Beglinger and another guide to divulge details that shed new light on the tragedy. Such impressive reporting offers fresh insight into Kelly’s final hours, and the author’s empathetic portrayal of Kelly as a purist who “turned his back on business deals, high-dollar sponsorship contracts, and... prize money” to return to the “powdery backcountry that had first drawn him to his calling” will resonate even with those unfamiliar with his legacy. It’s a stirring tribute to a talent gone too soon. (Feb.)This review has been updated to remove a spoiler.

    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2024
      The life and death of a celebrated athlete. Adventure biographer Blehm chronicles the storied career of Craig Kelly (1966-2003), a self-taught, world champion snowboarder, who died in an avalanche in British Columbia. In the 1980s, snowboarding was just becoming popular. "Small tribes of snowboarders started popping up across the country," he writes, consisting mostly of surfers and skateboarders who "looked at mountains and saw frozen waves, halfpipes, and glorious glassy-smooth powder to ride." Ski areas thought they were a nuisance: Of around 500 sites, only about 50 allowed snowboarding. By the 1990s, about 2 million people were participating in the sport, and Kelly was the brightest star. Skiing, he said, felt "disjointed," but snowboarding "felt like an extension of my body." He dropped out of college to train for competition, focusing on perfecting entire halfpipe runs and adding flourishes to stand out. In 1987, he "swept the field" of the Grand Prix of Snowboarding in Aspen; in 1988, for the second year in a row, he was named "Freestyle World Champion and Overall World Champion." As Blehm writes, "He levitated down mountains, raced avalanches, aired cliffs, and landed on the covers of magazines." But though he loved the challenge of the sport, he was not invested in the glitz and glamor of being a celebrity. Preferring to snowboard in natural terrain, he studied "the mechanics of the mountains, the engineering of avalanches, and the science of snow down to the granular, if not microscopic, level." He aspired to join the elite Association of Canadian Mountain Guides and was in the midst of training when the avalanche hit "with cold, hard indifference" and dragged him and 12 others into the icy darkness. Blehm recounts in gripping detail the terrifying disaster, the desperate rescue efforts, and the ensuing investigations into the cause. A stirring adventure narrative and sports bio.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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