So far it looks like I’m an outlier here, but this book did very little for me. Jones is clearly legit in his breadth of experience, and I enjoyed learning about his life, but I feel he was trying to do too much here. The result is a very superficial rendering of topics that deserve more. Every travel or adventure anecdote left me wanting for more details and depth. The avalanche and snow safety info was trite—and almost dangerous. If you are really into those topics, you know this book is not the place to learn them. If you think this book is the place to learn them, you are set up for trouble. Jones doesn’t try to promote this as a substitute for avalanche safety education, but then what’s the point of going there at all? Lastly, climate change and the need to protect our winters are real, but I knew that just as much before reading the book as after. I have no new info to better understand the issue, and no actionable advice, other than maybe sign up for his Protect our Winters nonprofit and watch more Teton Gravity Research movies? Neither bad ideas, but also not novel. Hike up instead of helicopter? (phew, solved that problem almost nobody has!)
If this book sparked something in you, but also left you wanting for more, I strongly recommend Kit DesLauriers “Higher Love: Climbing and Skiing the Seven Summits.” Epic ski mountaineering adventure/travel book, with bonus insights and reflections if you also happen to be woman and/or a mom. Read it twice last year! And Bruce Tremper’s “Staying Alive in Avalanche Terrain,” may give you a fighting chance of actually accomplishing that. Otherwise, this book may be best for people very, very new to skiing/snowboarding/backcountry, looking for some cool stories and a very general overview—or passionate snowboarders who are just going to love everything this guy has a say no matter what (and with his background I can see why).
I’ll add that it was unexpected and heartbreaking to read his interview with Hillaree Nelson. She died 2 weeks before the book release date, and the interview with reference to her in present tense— in addition to a real sense of her level of intelligence and responsibility in the mountains—was poignant.