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Cover of Deep Survival by Laurence Gonzales

Deep Survival

Who Lives, Who Dies, and Why

by Laurence Gonzales

5/5
W. W. Norton & Company 336 pages October 4, 2004

Part journalism, part neuroscience, part personal story, Gonzales investigates why some people walk out of impossible situations while others — often more experienced — perish. Drawing on accident reports, survivor interviews, and cognitive science, Deep Survival is the definitive book on the psychology of staying alive.

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Jim's Review

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Most survival books teach you to tie a bowline. This one teaches you why your brain is the thing most likely to kill you. Gonzales is a journalist whose father survived a B-17 crash, and he spent decades figuring out what made the difference between the dad who came home and the crewmates who didn't. The answer is mostly about how your mind handles stress, novelty, and ambiguity. Jim went into this expecting a thriller and came out understanding why expert skiers ski into avalanches, why pilots fly into mountains they can see, and why the "cool head" advice you've heard your whole life is dangerously incomplete. The chapter on "bending the map" — refusing to admit you're lost because reality doesn't match your expectation — is one of the most quietly terrifying things Jim has ever read. This isn't a how-to. It's a how-to-think, and it pairs perfectly with the practical manuals. If you only own one survival book and you want it to actually change how you behave, make it this one. Five worms. The book Jim recommends to every friend before they take up a new outdoor sport.

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