The Echo

More Stories from the Edge of Survival

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On sale Sep 15, 2026 | 10 Hours and 0 Minutes | 9798217417117

Legendary alpinist Barry Blanchard returns to the thin places where weather, will, and luck decide everything—and the consequences echo for years.

Blanchard, in his inimitable, heart-pounding, and brutally honest style, continues reminiscing about the life he introduced readers to in The Calling (Patagonia, 2017).

In these years, he travels from Alaska’s Infinite Spur on Mt. Foraker—where an ascent becomes an improvised rescue by radio and ethics—through a bruising, style-driven push on Everest’s unclimbed Northeast Flank with Mark Twight that ends in pulmonary and cerebral edema and a night in a Gamow bag. To Blanchard a mountain is a living force and a rope is a covenant. The book tracks the making—and unmaking—of a life in climbing: the punk rock years of pure alpinism; the solitude and severity of a new solo on Kusum Kanguru; the strange theater of Hollywood rigging on Cliffhanger; and the long arc toward humility after near misses, lost partners, and the realities of aging.

Threaded through the action are reckoning and repair—Métis identity and family, the cost of ambition, the bonds that hold under pressure, and the question of how long we can live close to the edge and still return home changed but whole. In the closing movement, he revisits cathedral walls in the Canadian Rockies (Howse Peak, Robson’s Emperor Face) before a catastrophic fall and arduous recovery reset everything, transforming risk into responsibility and performance into presence. What remains is partnership, craft, and love—the things that outlast summits. The Echo is a fierce, lyrical testament to survival, style, and consequence from one of climbing’s defining voices.

About

Legendary alpinist Barry Blanchard returns to the thin places where weather, will, and luck decide everything—and the consequences echo for years.

Blanchard, in his inimitable, heart-pounding, and brutally honest style, continues reminiscing about the life he introduced readers to in The Calling (Patagonia, 2017).

In these years, he travels from Alaska’s Infinite Spur on Mt. Foraker—where an ascent becomes an improvised rescue by radio and ethics—through a bruising, style-driven push on Everest’s unclimbed Northeast Flank with Mark Twight that ends in pulmonary and cerebral edema and a night in a Gamow bag. To Blanchard a mountain is a living force and a rope is a covenant. The book tracks the making—and unmaking—of a life in climbing: the punk rock years of pure alpinism; the solitude and severity of a new solo on Kusum Kanguru; the strange theater of Hollywood rigging on Cliffhanger; and the long arc toward humility after near misses, lost partners, and the realities of aging.

Threaded through the action are reckoning and repair—Métis identity and family, the cost of ambition, the bonds that hold under pressure, and the question of how long we can live close to the edge and still return home changed but whole. In the closing movement, he revisits cathedral walls in the Canadian Rockies (Howse Peak, Robson’s Emperor Face) before a catastrophic fall and arduous recovery reset everything, transforming risk into responsibility and performance into presence. What remains is partnership, craft, and love—the things that outlast summits. The Echo is a fierce, lyrical testament to survival, style, and consequence from one of climbing’s defining voices.

Author

Books for Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Heritage Month

Each May, we honor the stories, histories, and cultures of Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders. Below is a selection of acclaimed fiction and nonfiction books by AANHPI creators to share with your students this month and throughout the year. Find our full collection of titles for Higher Education here.

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