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Extreme Encounters: How It Feels to Be Drowned in Quicksand, Shredded by Piranhas, Swept Up in a Tornado, and Dozens of Other Unpleasant Experiences...

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Brace yourself.
 
If you’re the squeamish type, turn back now. If you’re afraid of a little blood, read no further. But if you’ve ever wondered what it’s like to be struck by lightning, swallowed by quicksand, or stung by a jellyfish, then fasten your seatbelt and get ready for a wild ride.
 
Extreme Encounters offers blow-by-blow accounts of life’s most dangerous experiences in thrilling “you-are-there” second person—so you chill to the numbing effects of frostbite, you hear the ear-splitting roar of a tornado, and you feel the stomach-lurching drop of an elevator freefall. Full of harrowing adventure and surprising scientific insights, Extreme Encounters is a journey you’ll never forget.

176 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2002

5 people are currently reading
144 people want to read

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5 stars
28 (19%)
4 stars
39 (27%)
3 stars
54 (37%)
2 stars
18 (12%)
1 star
4 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews
Profile Image for Stacee.
3,033 reviews758 followers
March 15, 2015
I've had this book for a while and just found it. It was a quick read on interesting topics, but I found the narrative a bit bland.

It's written in second person, which took me a some time to get used to. However, it is a clever way to get the reader involved in what is happening. Of all of the topics covered, I've only experienced the skydiving and I didn't think the chapter came close to describing what it feels like.

In the front of every chapter, there was a sentence or two from a person who had gone through the topic. I would have liked more from those people instead of the seemingly fiction-like narrative.
Profile Image for Natalie.
513 reviews108 followers
December 3, 2008
I really could have done without the second-person "Choose Your Own Adventure"-style narration, or the very pathetic attempts at humor that the authors attempt to inject. Aside from that, they were more or less meticulous in their research.
48 reviews
January 11, 2008
Meh. How it feels to read a book that should be fascinating but isn't.
Profile Image for J.
3,930 reviews34 followers
December 7, 2024
This is a book that has been laying around and so I chose to pick it up to see what it was about.

Extreme Encounters is the type of book that my past morbidly dark self would have enjoyed as a read. The reader is presented with a collection of scenarios where the author sets the reader to deal with well-known events whether as mundane as animal attacks or weather to various execution methods, medical dramas, etc. And during the telling of "each" story the cause of death or injuries is explained in detail.

In a sense the stories almost read like a Choose Your Own Adventure but without the chance to really make any decisions other than the story you are reading. In many of the stories you die, in several you survive although sometimes with effects and in a few there is no actual ends such as being shot or ending back again in quicksand but off the beaten path.

Each story starts off with a title and a quote from someone who has been through the experience. As a result it is a bit of a spoiler.

The only illustrations are included at the start of each section where a heavily colored illustration, usually in pink and black, is used. These aren't very creative (shark - animal encounters, tornado - weather & bars for crime just to name a few.

Although interesting in its own way, it just isn't a book I would read again if I have a choice.
Profile Image for Jeb.
25 reviews3 followers
February 27, 2008
If you are curious about what it's like to die in the electric chair, slowly have your brain eaten away by Mad Cow disease or suffer a horrible death from the Ebola virus then this is the book for you! The author puts you in the shoes of someone who is suffering, dying or enduring all this and more. While some of the "extreme encounters" are told in a truly harrowing way, others are a bit bland and silly.

But silliness plays a large part of what this book is about and makes the sometimes dark subject matter a bit more palatable to those with more delicate sensibilities. A fun and quick read. It's one of those books that you just breeze through during a lazy afternoon.
611 reviews2 followers
November 16, 2018
Not a pleasant book, as intended. this describes how people die (or not): drownings, piranhas, tornados, fire ant attack,snakes, sharks, bombs, detox on your own, the bends, buried alive, acid attack, in a heavyweight fight, hanging, etc, etc. Very interesting but very gory and very brutal.
Profile Image for Allison.
39 reviews5 followers
June 11, 2024
Well, that was a fun little 2-day binge. If you don't have interest in the whole collection, just read the one about piranhas, and maybe being buried in an avalanche.
Short stories of dozen of ways to die combined the scientific with the horrific, and left plenty of material to entertain myself with for two evenings on the couch after work. The logistics of, say, what happens when someone passes away from carbon monoxide poisoning are fascinating simply because it's impossible to experience it (and live to describe to someone else).
I do wish the author hadn't felt the need to leave a comedic one-liner at the end of each chapter, because it makes for a VERY cheesy signoff. Just leave the corpse lying there. Mom doesn't have to come over to apologize with a fruitcake you were making fun of at Thanksgiving dinner.
The 2nd-person narration blends a Choose Your Own Adventure-style tone with an Edgar A. Poe macabre, for those readers who really don't care about the mechanics of the human body. Turns out that most deaths aren't caused by anything really graphic, it's just a matter of how long it takes for the brain to be deprived of blood and/or oxygen. Shrug.
Profile Image for Heenz.
38 reviews
March 17, 2021
This book haunted me for a decade and a half. I just thought everyone should know that. I couldn't remember anything about the book except I borrowed it in the eighth grade, and the stories about the bear attack and chinese water torture lived rent free in my head ever since.

Aside from that, very interesting read. I really enjoy the second person narrative, and it's very fun. Some of the science facts are outdated, and in a couple of spots there is outright misinformation, but I don't believe the misinformation could be construed as harmful. It's mostly just anecdotes that have been proven over time to be false. Can be quite graphic at times.

7.5/10
Profile Image for Xanthi.
1,641 reviews15 followers
March 7, 2022
This book is engrossing for us who hold morbid fascination for this general topic. I expected more first hand accounts. They were minimal. What readers actually get are fictional scenarios written with a good deal of black humour and incorporating facts. Whilst these were interesting and informative enough, I still would have liked some interviews with survivors who experienced some of these extreme events and conditions.
Profile Image for Raul sadok.
290 reviews8 followers
May 6, 2019
I'm still not sure what kind of book I've just read, as an informative book is ok but as a horror book it's pretty lousy, the stories are too short and too light with two pages per story does not give time to create tension. Also, I hate the silly jokes at the end of each story. But I like the idea of ​​relating real accidents to horror.
Profile Image for H. Woodward.
374 reviews3 followers
August 14, 2021
Despite the subject matter and all the people lacking imagination on this review list, I loved this book. The short (2-3) page entries cover a lot of different subjects and include a fair balance of information and narrative. If you grew up on Choose Your Own Adventure books and enjoyed finding all the ways you could die in those books, this book is for you1
Profile Image for Martin Gordon.
10 reviews
January 13, 2018
Small chapters anecdotes of suffering and occasional survival. I liked especially the last two anecdotes of the skydiving and getting launched into space. Quick easy read.
Profile Image for Z.
95 reviews
July 26, 2019
Only a couple of chapters really grabbed me, the rest were rather superficial.
Profile Image for Michelle.
15 reviews3 followers
May 6, 2022
Compelling stories mixed with some wry, dark observations.
Profile Image for Dana Renee.
4 reviews
March 4, 2025
If anyone remembers that show 1000 Ways to Die from TV, this is the literary version of that. This would probably be a fascinating book for an older middle schooler/young high schooler
Profile Image for Kasandra.
Author 1 book41 followers
December 29, 2009
I expected a quick and entertaining read, and it was both, but... the 2nd-person narration falls flat, and I'd have liked actual interviews with survivors, or quoted first-hand accounts. For something that should have been way more interesting, it was actually fairly boring. Still, maybe some of it will end up making its way into some morbidly fun and gruesome poetry. We'll see. I will say, the chapter on kidney stones was accurate ("like someone is using a knife to carve you like a pumpkin from the inside".... yup.)
Profile Image for Jonathan.
Author 3 books14 followers
February 13, 2008
This book takes the reader through a range of "extreme encounters", i.e. near-death experiences. It is told in a very interesting 4th person perspective. Where this book fails to execute is the applicability factor. It just isn't interesting enough, and that is where it falls short.
35 reviews
August 12, 2011
I found this an interesting read. Not for everyone I guess but really was interesting to know how or possibly how things would happen in different situations. If you have a slight morbid interest then you will enjoy this book
Profile Image for Joe Napolitano.
4 reviews1 follower
February 17, 2014
Quick read, and very interesting but it could do without the second person narration. The book would be 4 maybe 5 stars if written differently. But I would still recommend reading it as a fill in on a short flight or bathroom reading
Profile Image for izrtkfliers.
76 reviews14 followers
December 15, 2014
Read this in eighth grade, enjoyed it a lot at the time, but it's not a very deep read and it's written in second person, Choose Your Own Adventure style.
Profile Image for Jenn.
13 reviews2 followers
December 1, 2012
Not crazy about the 2nd person narration of this book but interesting stuff that I've always wondered about.
Profile Image for Joseph Hogan.
30 reviews7 followers
September 11, 2014
Loved it. Read it as a kid. Going to pass it on to my younger brother and my boys when they grow up!
Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews

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