Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home

by Nando Parrado, Vince Rause (Author)

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Nando Parrado regained consciousness to discover that the plane carrying his rugby team, as well as family members and supporters, had crashed deep in the Andes. Many were dead or dying, among them his own mother and sister. Those who remained were stranded on a glacier at nearly 12,000 feet, with no supplies and no means of summoning help. They struggled to endure freezing temperatures, deadly avalanches, and then the devastating news that the search for them had been called off. Nando's show more thoughts turned to his father, who he knew must be consumed with grief, and he resolved that he must get home or die trying--so an ordinary young man, with no disposition for leadership or heroism, led an expedition across 45 miles of frozen wilderness. Thirty years later, Nando provides a revealing look at life at the edge of death and a meditation on the limitless redemptive power of love.--From publisher description. show less

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caimanjosh This book clearly is somewhat different - there's no sea journeying involved - yet the themes of enduring terrible suffering and overcoming incredible hardships to effect a rescue of one's comrades are the same. Both are the most inspiring stories about the human spirit that I've ever read.

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47 reviews
If you’ve never read Alive by Piers Paul Read or even if you have read that book, it would be so well worth your time to read Miracle in the Andes, the first person narrative of Nando Parrado’s survival of a plane crash in the Andes, the extraordinarily high mountain range of South America. The story is compelling, of course, but this memoir, written together with Vince Rouse, provides a heartbreaking recollection of what it feels like to be so close to death yet desire, with all one’s heart, not to die despite overwhelming odds against survival.

Even though I knew details of Parrado’s story, reading this book never semed like a “rerun”. I was there in those frigid mountains with him all the way. I suffered with him, both show more physically and emotionally. I found it amazing that Parrado and Rause could together write a book which felt as if it happened just yesterday although this accident occurred in 1972. In the end, it was rewarding to learn that the survivors have thrived in the many years following their plane accident. Their survival in the Andes was truly a miracle. show less
In 1973, just a year after the fateful crash in the Andes, Piers Paul Read wrote the now epic account of this survivors' story, Alive. Read's story is universally acclaimed as a masterful account of this epic tale of cannibalism and the power of human will. It's a third person account and it has taken 30 years for one of the sixteen survivors to tell their memoir. This task was finally assumed by Nando Parrado, one of the two men who left the relative security of the plane's fuselage to scale the mighty Andes mountain in search of a rescuer. He recounts in vivid detail and brutal honesty his personal thoughts and feelings of hunger, thirst, despair, hope, fear, dread, and every motion in between. This first person account is vivid, show more riveting, and a page turner, even if you have read Alive and know the story. It's spiritual and philosophical too. He concludes that love is what saved him and exhorts readers to live a life of love and to truly live each moment. I was really touched by Parrado's unflinching introspection and modesty and his desire to impart hard earned lessons to us all. show less
Even in the minds of the co-authors, this book is overshadowed by another, Piers Paul Read's Alive, which told this story of a plane crash and the months that followed in the Andes using interviews of the survivors. Nando Parrado, one of those survivors called Alive a "magnificent book" and said he had not tried to tell his own story for 30 years because he felt that book already covered "all the public needed to know." Vince Rause in his acknowledgments admitted wondering if another book was necessary since Alive "told that story in such exhaustive detail, and with such definitive scope and power." I read Alive decades ago--it was assigned reading in high school, and it made an indelible impression. There was little in this account show more that was a surprise to me, because I remembered so many of the details of that other book, and I'd certainly say if you're going to read only one account of this story, it should be that one--it's wonderfully and sensitively written.

But Rouse said he thought another account would be worthwhile if Parrado was really willing to open up and take you back on that mountain and help you think what he thought and felt what he felt and take you along on the spiritual and physical journey he took, and in that I think it succeeds wonderfully. In fact, at certain points I was even moved close to tears, and that isn't easy. Alive emphasized the importance of their shared faith in the ordeal they underwent. There were 45 passengers and crew on that plane, and within a week there were only 27 survivors with all the food running out. To stay alive, those remaining had to resort to eating the bodies of the dead. To allow themselves to do that, some clung to their faith, even trying to see their taking nourishment from their dead as a form of communion.

It was different for Parrado, who would take his survival into his own hands and with one companion make a near impossible climb over the mountain to go get help. Certainly, if there was one survivor of that ordeal whose story I'd want to know, it's his--because he didn't just wait to die. For him in the end the miracle of the Andes wasn't from God. He wrote that he found the "opposite of death is not mere living... courage or faith or human will." It's love. In the end, it was his love for the family that would be grieving for him that pushed him to endure. Parrado's account of the psychology of survival reminded me of nothing so much of accounts I've read of survival in concentration camps--which went well beyond the mere physical. This doesn't to my mind replace Alive, but it's a book well worth having together with it on your shelf.
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This is a familiar story that was related in Alive by Piers Paul Read and in a movie of the same title, about a plane chartered by a rugby team in 1972 that went down on one of the highest peaks of the Andes, leaving many of the passengers injured but alive. Parrado was one of those passengers. This is his story. When they heard news on a radio that the search had been called off, he and others decided they had to climb out of the mountains if they were to have any chance of survival. Parrado and another young man made a heroic, miraculous trek to reach help. The sensational news was they they had (necessarily) resorted to cannibalism, but although that had been a difficult decision, it was not the most horrific they had suffered. The show more frigid temperatures, an avalanche that killed eight and left the fuselage, their only shelter, buried, the terrible injuries, the lack of everything they needed, was considerably worse.

The biographical details at the beginning allows the reader to relate so much more to the disaster by getting to know some of the individuals. Also appreciated was the final update on the survivors. A few years ago I saw a movie of the story. Parrado's personal account delivered a more powerful account of the despair, desolation, helplessness and the agonizing trek out.
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This is more than a description of a disaster and its survivors. 'Alive' by Piers Paul Reed did that job just a couple of years after the miracle in the Andes, as dubbed by the media. This book, written more than 30 years after the events is much more. Nando Parrado shares his personal, emotional journey from the moment he awoke from a coma, three days after the crash, to trekking an impossible distance in impossible circumstances to find civilization and mount a rescue for the remaining survivors. Add to that, he shares with us how his life developed after he and the other survivors were reborn - what happens after the rescue.

This was truly an amazing book.
Wow. I’m lost for words. You can feel yourself in Nando Parrado’s place, facing the cold, hunger, and fear; it all felt real and authentic. The focus on beautiful women in the beginning and end, though, struck me as odd and unreflective.
I watched the movie many years ago and I have always been fascinated with the story. At the bookstore I could choose between this book and "Alive," the historical account of what happened. I decided for this because I was more interested in seeing the facts from the perspective of one of the protagonists. I could not be happier with my choice. The book is a detailed narrative of the existential and spiritual journey of Nando Parrado through the months of the accident and afterwards. I found it very inspiring.

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Common Knowledge

Original title
Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
Original publication date
2006
Important places
Uruguay; Andes Mountains
Important events
Plane crash
Related movies*
Alive (1993 | IMDb); Society of the Snow (2023 | IMDb)
Dedication
To Veronique, Veronica, and Cecilia. It was all worth it. I would do it all again for you.
First words
In the first hours there was nothing, no fear or sadness, no sense of the passage of time, not even the glimmer of a thought or a memory, just a black and perfect silence.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Do not waste a breath.
Blurbers
Krakauer, Jon; Ralston, Aron; Stark, Peter; Hillary, Peter; Read, Piers Paul
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
Biography & Memoir, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction, Travel, History
DDC/MDS
982.6History & geographyHistory of South AmericaArgentina
LCC
TL553.9 .P37TechnologyMotor vehicles. Aeronautics. AstronauticsMotor vehicles. Aeronautics. AstronauticsAeronautics. Aeronautical engineering
BISAC

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Reviews
46
Rating
(4.14)
Languages
10 — Czech, Dutch, English, French, German, Italian, Norwegian (Bokmål), Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
43
ASINs
7