Friday, January 9, 2009

Jumping Fire or Terror in the Name of God

Jumping Fire: A Smokejumper's Memoir of Fighting Wildfire

Author: Murry A Taylor

A smokejumper recounts his three decades parachuting out of planes and fighting wildfires in the rugged West.

During one incendiary summer, Murry Taylor kept an extensive journal of his day-to-day activities as an Alaskan smokejumper. It wasn't his first season fighting wildfires, and he's far from being a rookie-he's been on the job since 1965. Through this narrative of one busy season, Taylor reflects on the years of training, the harrowing adrenaline-fueled jumps, his brushes with death, the fires he conquered, and the ones that got away. It's a world full of bravado, one with epic battles of man versus nature, resulting in stories of death-defying defeats, serious injury, and occasionally tragedy. We witness Taylor's story; learn of the training, preparation, technology, and latest equipment used in fighting wildfires; and get to know his fellow smokejumpers in the ready room, on the tundra, and in the vast forests of one of the last great wilderness areas in the world.

Often thrilling and informative and always entertaining, Taylor's memoir is one of the first autobiographical accounts of a legendary career.

About the Author:

Murry A. Taylor has been a smokejumper since 1965. He divides his time between Alaska and northern California. This is his first book.

Outside Magazine - Caroline Fraser

A grand adventure that captures a lifestyle of violent oscillations between terror, boredom, and exhaustion.

Wall Street Journal - John Holkeboer

The author writes with authority and hair-raising detail about parachuting into remote locations to fight fires.

A grand adventure that captures a lifestyle of violent oscillations between terror, boredom, and exhaustion.

Outside

A grand adventure that captures a lifestyle of violent oscillations between terror, boredom, and exhaustion.

KLIATT

Being a smokejumper is a dangerous and difficult career. The author details his long life in fire fighting; it began in 1965 and didn't end until the summer of 2000. He was the oldest person ever to do the job, and this book is filled with stories about different fires in his career. It is also a look at a man wondering if he has done the best he could with his life. A glossary of terms helps with the understanding of all the equipment used in this demanding and compelling occupation. Older students who have an interest in smokejumping will enjoy every hazardous moment that he describes. KLIATT Codes: SA—Recommended for senior high school students, advanced students, and adults. 2000, Harcourt, 459p., $14.00. Ages 16 to adult. Reviewer: Barbara Jo McKee; Libn/Media Dir., Streetsboro H.S., Stow, OH , September 2001 (Vol. 35 No. 5)

Library Journal

The author is a veteran forest fire fighter in Alaska, one of a corps of highly trained and conditioned specialists who are actually eager to jump out of an airplane into a raging fire. Taylor has spent 25 years doing this work, unusual longevity for such physically demanding activity. The work, which is seasonal and involves long periods of boredom punctuated by intense pain, exhaustion, and fear, would satisfy any testosterone addict. Additionally, the demands of the fire season mean that smokejumpers are separated from their families for months in an environment not exactly conducive to stable relationships. However, Taylor manages a thoughtful and readable exploration of a middle-aged man coming to terms with his life, his successes, and his failures, which unexpectedly struck a chord with this reviewer. For readers who like books like Sebastian Junger's The Perfect Storm. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 2/1/00.]--Edwin B. Burgess, U.S. Army Combined Arms Research Lib., Fort Leavenworth, KS Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Booknews

In the shadow of Mt. McKinley, above the Yukon River, and the Rocky Mountains are among the places Taylor has fought fires during his 20- year career. His account includes digging firelines, fighting off angry bears, telling funny stories around the campfire, and remembering jumpers who have fallen to their deaths and pilots who have perished in fiery crashes. He is the oldest living fire jumper, and the oldest ever to jump. He includes a glossary without a guide to pronunciation. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

What People Are Saying

Patrick McManus
Forget fiction. Jumping Fire is the best action/adventure thriller I've read in years! Murry Taylor is one terrific writer.


John Maclean
From the Author of Fire on the Mountain: the True Story of the South Canyon Fire

Grab your boots and chutes. Murry Taylor puts you in the harness for a thrill-a-page account of smokejumping based on his already-legendary career. You see the stupendous landscapes, feel the crush of the brutal landings, work to exhaustion, and then hike out eager to be back on board, ready to jump again. Taylor has lived the dream; now he lets the rest of us in on it.?


William Kittredge
From the Author of Hole in the Sky

Jumping from airplanes, fighting the fires, beating the odds, losing the new love? Murry Taylor gives us a modern story of adventure and on-the-job heroism. Nothing touristy or politically correct about it, Jumping Fire is the actual thing, and a vivid compelling story.?


Pat Kelly
I've spent over thirty years fighting fires and leading fire-fighting organizations and Murry Taylor's Jumping Fire is an insightful and passionate account of the pain, pressure, sacrifices and rewards that make up the life of the seasonal firefighter. He captures the physical and mental commitment that the job demands and his passages on fire-fighting episodes are excellent.
— Pat Kelly, Former Assistant Director of the National Fire and Aviation Program, U.S.B.A. Forest Service


Michael Thoele
Michael Thoele, author of Fire Line: Summer Battles of the West
Jumping Fire is Murry Taylor's exquisite and revealing paean to smoke-jumping. Packing the scars of a fire fighting lifetime, Taylor captures West's last great itinerant lifestyle in a tale where the battles of mind and heart and body are as incandescent as a torching spruce.




Books about: Zwischenbuchhaltung

Terror in the Name of God: Why Religious Militants Kill

Author: Jessica Stern

For five years, Jessica Stern interviewed extremist members of three religions around the world: Christians, Jews, and Muslims. She traveled extensively -- to refugee camps in Lebanon, to religious schools in Pakistan, to prisons in Amman, Ashqelon, and Pensacola -- and discovered that the Islamic jihadi in the mountains of Pakistan and the Christian fundamentalist bomber in Oklahoma have much in common.

Based on her vast research, Stern lucidly explains how terrorist organizations are formed by opportunistic leaders who -- using religion as both motivation and justification -- recruit the disenfranchised. She depicts how moral fervor is transformed into sophisticated organizations that strive for money, power, or attention and suggests how terrorism might most effectively be countered.

The New York Times

A leading expert on terrorism and a lecturer at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard, [Stern] has tracked down and interviewed an impressive range of activists in a variety of causes from Florida to Kashmir. On a subject that tends to be richer in rhetoric than in detail, a writer able and willing to get this close is hard to find … As a description of the problem, though, this is a serious and provocative beginning. — Isabel Hilton

The Washington Post

Stern is the think-tank world's Bond girl, a rare female expert on terrorism and weapons of mass destruction; she was the inspiration for the Nicole Kidman character in "The Peacemaker." Her previous book, The Ultimate Terrorists, dissected the probability that terrorists would launch a nuclear or chemical attack, complete with psychological studies and policy suggestions. This latest one is the follow-up field trip, low on theory, high on anecdote: The professor comes face to face with her subjects. — Hanna Rosin

The New Yorker

This sophisticated examination of religiously motivated terrorism is a welcome antidote to the armchair analyses of Islamic extremism that surfaced in the wake of September 11th. Stern spent five years interviewing religious terrorists of all stripes, including anti-abortion crusaders, Hamas leaders, and militants in Pakistan and Indonesia. She found men and women who were driven not by nihilistic rage or lunacy but by a deep faith in the justice of their causes and in the possibility of transforming the world through violence. That faith, Stern suggests, is fuelled by poverty, repression, and a sense of humiliation, and then exploited by “inspirational leaders” who turn confused people into killers. The West cannot fight terror by intelligence and military means alone, she argues; a “smarter realpolitik approach” toward the developing world would use policy to deprive terrorists of not only funding and weapons but potential recruits.

Publishers Weekly

Stern, a former fellow on terrorism at the Council on Foreign Relations (and the inspiration for Nicole Kidman's character in The Peacemaker), makes the issue personal by depicting her encounters with religious terrorists around the world. Her definition of "religious terrorism" is comprehensive, encompassing the growing Muslim jihad in Indonesia, militant Palestinians and zealous Israelis, and Americans who kill abortion doctors in the name of Christ. Given the opportunity to articulate their positions, these and other subjects surprise not by their vehemence but by their relative normality, making it all the more curious that many of them eventually elect to strike against their opponents with deadly force. Explaining the "how" therefore becomes as important as explaining the "why," and the book carefully outlines the ways in which militant leaders of all denominations find recruits among the disenfranchised and recondition them, often under cultlike conditions, stoking their zealotry to the point of suicide and murder. Coupled with additional research, Stern's firsthand encounters bring a valuable and much-needed perspective to the problem of religious violence, and she identifies several increasingly broad threats, including the extent to which many governments will tolerate or even sponsor militant religious groups to further their own political agendas. For all the material damage terrorist acts cause, Stern argues, we should understand religious militance as a form of psychological warfare, calculated to bolster the faithful and strike "spiritual dread" in the unbelievers; the most effective counterstrategy is thus not violence but nonviolent techniques such as psychological counterwarfare and the reaffimation of our own values. (Aug. 19) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Foreign Affairs

Stern, who has devoted years of study to her subject, strings together accounts of her many interviews with terrorists and former terrorists in a very readable book that treats mainly Muslims but gives careful attention to Christian and Jewish terrorists as well. The style is that of a personal odyssey, in search of the roots of religious militancy. She skips often from specific to general and from one country or religion to another, relating her own concerns and working hypotheses while weaving into the narrative many insights from studies in disciplines as diverse as psychology and history. The first part sets out five categories of grievances that move people to embrace terrorism (alienation, humiliation, demographics, history, and territory). The second treats the different patterns of terrorist organization; she considers charismatic leaders, lone-wolf avengers, and commanders and their cadres, as well as the "ultimate organization" that takes advantage of all of the above, al Qaeda being the classic example. After sifting the many different motives that impel people to terrorism and the different modalities of terrorists in action, she concludes with "policy recommendations" that amount to no quick fix but are sensible steps, appropriate to the harsh reality that she has so effectively illuminated.

Library Journal

A lecturer at Harvard's Kennedy School of Public Policy, Stern spent four years talking to terrorists of all stripes to determine that recent terrorist organizations have been preempted by opportunists. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Anybody who thinks Eric Robert Rudolph has nothing in common with Osama bin Laden needs to spend time with Terror in the Name of God. Stern, a former terrorism specialist at the National Security Council and the Council on Foreign Relations, now teaches a course on terrorism at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. But it's her willingness to present herself in the tent—or, more often, the cell—of some of the world's most feared and reviled killers that confers authenticity. The author spent five years interviewing Christian, Jewish, and Muslim extremists in sites ranging from a Texas trailer park to Pakistani prisons reserved for those who have achieved Hannibal Lecter status. And when a Jewish woman asks a Hamas leader face to face why he does it, the result is definitely a Silence of the Lambs moment, only more chilling. Are they deranged? Most, says Stern, are probably not, but they have been conditioned, even transformed, into people whose "dual killer self" carries the holy conviction that the world can be made better, and God's will be done, through terror and murder. Root cause? Not one, the author asserts, but a typical complex of repression, poverty, and alienation, often acting in concert with a desire to simplify one's life in a hopelessly complicated world. In the case of the Palestinians, she notes, "It is not just the violence; it is the pernicious effect of repeated humiliations that add up to a feeling of nearly unbearable despair." Stern's supporting details have their own fascination: for instance, Sri Lanka's Tamil Tigers are probably the world's best organized modern terrorist group, having killed more people by thousands (including two heads of state)than any other. She also correlates the rise of terrorism in Indonesia, culminating in the recent Bali bombing, directly with its 1997 financial crisis. Emphatic case for understanding terrorists in order to defeat them.



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