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Product Description Illustrates, through a harrowing first-person account of an eruption and its aftermath, a look into the fascinating, high-risk world of volcanology in an incisive exploration of the profound impact volcanoes have had on the earth's landscape and civilizations. 150,000 first printing. $150,000 first printing. Amazon.com Review On January 14, 1993, Stanley Williams led a party of fellow geologists up Galeras, a Colombian volcano that, though historically active, had been lying quiet long enough that they suspected it was due for an episode--and thus an opportunity for the volcanologists to practice their predicting skills. As they reached the lip of its great crater, Galeras obliged them with a vengeance: it erupted in a burst of fire and toxic gas, killing several members of the party and leaving Williams scorched and broken, "sprawled on my side, caked in ash and blood, wet from the rain, bones protruding from my burned clothes, my jaw hanging slackly." Rescued by two colleagues, Marta Velasco and Patty Mothes, Williams faced several challenges in the years to come--not only healing his body and exorcising the ghosts of Galeras, but also contending with other colleagues' whispered charges that he should have known the mountain was about to blow. But death, Williams and collaborator Fen Montaigne (Reeling in Russia) write, comes with the territory. Whenever a volcano has erupted in recent years, it seems, a volcanologist is among its victims, for, Williams notes, "the best way to understand a volcano is still, in my opinion, to climb it," and to climb it in all of its moods. And those moods, Williams and Montaigne add, are not easy to forecast, even if earth scientists have developed ever more accurate ways to predict events such as earthquakes and tsunamis. At once a study in mountains, the history of geology, and the will to endure, Surviving Galeras is often terrifying, and altogether memorable. --Gregory McNamee Review "Artfully written" -- Publishers Weekly "'Surviving Galeras' does a masterful job of evoking the volcano's deadly lure." -- Boston Globe "A gripping worm's-eye view of being caught in a volcanic eruption with a fascinating overview of horrific eruptions through history." -- The Oregonian "A gripping worm's-eye view of being caught in a volcanic eruption with a fascinating overview of horrific eruptions through history." -- The Oregonian "Frightening and fascinating...expertly narrated account of natural mayhem, in the tradition of Into Thin Air and The Perfect Storm." -- Kirkus Reviews with Pointers, starred review "Williams' account remains the better read, thanks to the firsthand narrative and able assistance from coauthor Fen Montaigne." -- Forbes "['Surviving Galeras'] is popular science at its best and a moving personal tragedy to boot." -- The New York Times Review of Books "['Surviving Galeras'] is popular science at its best and a moving personal tragedy to boot." -- Review From the Back Cover "I thoroughly enjoyed this excellent book -- a Baedeker to the landscape of the Inferno. Through its pages, Stanley Williams wanders the world's fifteen hundred active volcanoes - going not only to them, but also on them and in them. He portrays his colleagues (of both sexes) as members of a rare breed: mostly scientist, part explorer and part thrill-seeker. Loving their dangerous work, they brave natural hellfire and brimstone, bent on a humanitarian mission to save lives by perfecting methods for predicting when magma-filled mountains will explode. Williams' own near-death experience on Galeras, in the Colombian Andes, where he lost six colleagues to a surprise eruption, is the leitmotif that drives this riveting story and shanghais the reader." -- Dava Sobel, author of Longitude and Gallileo's Daughter "Williams and Montaigne capture a nightmare too real for Dante to have imagined. Surviving Galeras artfully blends science writing and history with pure, heart-poundin