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Mad, Bad & Dangerous to Know: The Autobiography

Mad, Bad & Dangerous to Know: The AutobiographyAuthor: Ranulph Fiennes
Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton

List Price: $14.95
Buy New: $8.48
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Seller: a1books
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 138118

Media: Paperback
Pages: 352
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5 x 1.1

ISBN: 0340951699
Dewey Decimal Number: 910.92
EAN: 9780340951699
ASIN: 0340951699

Publication Date: August 1, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • ISBN13: 9780340951699
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
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Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Mad, Bad & Dangerous to Know: The Autobiography
  • Audio CD - Mad, Bad and Dangerous to Know
  • Audio Download - Mad, Bad, and Dangerous to Know
  • Paperback - Mad, Bad & Dangerous to Know: The Autobiography

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Product Description

Ranulph Fiennes has traveled to the most dangerous and inaccessible places on earth. In the process he nearly died on several occasions, lost nearly half his fingers to frostbite, and raised millions of pounds for charity. He discovered the lost city of Ubar in Oman and attempted to walk solo and unsupported to the South Pole. He was the first man to reach both poles by surface travel and the first to cross the Antarctic Continent unsupported. In 1993, Her Majesty the Queen awarded him the Order of the British Empire for "human endeavor and charitable services." An elite soldier, an athlete, a mountaineer, and a renowned explorer, Fiennes describes here in his own words his incredible journey through life.




Customer Reviews:
5 out of 5 stars A great personal story from a great man with a great name.   June 23, 2009
Ned Middleton (British professional underwater photo-journalist & author)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Sir Ranulph Twisleton-Wykhan-Fiennes was once described by his prospective father-in-law as "Mad, Bad & Dangerous to Know." He is also described by the Guinness Book of Records as "the world's greatest living explorer" and this is the major part of the story of his life. I say `part' because, since this book was published in 2008, Ran Fiennes (as he is known) finally conquered Everest - at the age of 65!, in early 2009.

Throughout the book there is one single overriding quality which stands out above all others; For all the accolades poured upon this man, few bother to mention the fact that he is an engaging writer with the gift of capturing the reader's attention. Whether he is white-water rafting or walking to the South Pole, he has the knack of including his readers as part of the team and takes them along for the ride. This is why this book is so hard to put down.

It is an honest account of the life of someone unable to sit still. From his earliest recollections and formative years we move on to his service as an officer with 22 SAS and being required to leave after some exuberant exploits with explosives (and a betrayal by the press!) from where he later re-emerges as a Trooper (private soldier) in one the SAS reserve squadrons. An illuminating account of his active service in Oman is followed by an even more exciting narrative in which, his team travelled along some of the most dangerous and uncharted rivers in the world from the Yukon to the USA as a celebration of British Columbia's centenary. He was also considered by Cubby Broccoli for the part of James Bond!

The next 16 chapters are filled with expeditions and explorations too numerous to mention here. They include his circumnavigating the globe via both Poles, his use of an old hacksaw to saw off the ends of two fingers lost to frostbite and so many other achievements and hardships it is difficult to believe they were all undertaken by one man. Liberally filled with anecdotal accounts - such as the briefest explanation of the Royal Scots Greys, this book answers questions I had not yet asked.

Throughout it all, however, there comes across an image of the man himself and of his love for his family. In an excellently crafted autobiography, we meet Ginny, his childhood sweetheart and later the wife he almost never won. We continuously learn of her active involvement and support in his many exploits until we finally discover her own unsuccessful fight against cancer. Her passing is recorded with such simple honesty that no reader will fail to feel her loss as though she were one of their own family. The darkness which followed is such that we find great relief in seeing this fine person eventually able to continue his life as before. Completing seven marathons in seven days on seven continents, he just persists in exciting and astounding those who observe. By the time he finds a new love and a new family, we have become so close to this "central character" that we find ourselves experiencing relief and wishing him well.

On finishing this, quite amazing, story, I was left with the clear impression that somehow this was only the beginning and that more was to come. Already, he has finally conquered Everest but I doubt that even that magnificent feat will be the finale to this man's performance in the role of living his own life. Of one thing, however, I can be certain; Nobody will record his feats better than the man himself and I eagerly await part two of this incredible journey. This book cannot disappoint any reader.

NM




5 out of 5 stars A great personal story from a great man with a great name.   June 23, 2009
Ned Middleton (British professional underwater photo-journalist & author)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Sir Ranulph Twisleton-Wykhan-Fiennes was once described by his prospective father-in-law as "Mad, Bad & Dangerous to Know." He is also described by the Guinness Book of Records as "the world's greatest living explorer" and this is the major part of the story of his life. I say `part' because, since this book was published in 2008, Ran Fiennes (as he is known) finally conquered Everest - at the age of 65!, in early 2009.

Throughout the book there is one single overriding quality which stands out above all others; For all the accolades poured upon this man, few bother to mention the fact that he is an engaging writer with the gift of capturing the reader's attention. Whether he is white-water rafting or walking to the South Pole, he has the knack of including his readers as part of the team and takes them along for the ride. This is why this book is so hard to put down.

It is an honest account of the life of someone unable to sit still. From his earliest recollections and formative years we move on to his service as an officer with 22 SAS and being required to leave after some exuberant exploits with explosives (and a betrayal by the press!) from where he later re-emerges as a Trooper (private soldier) in one the SAS reserve squadrons. An illuminating account of his active service in Oman is followed by an even more exciting narrative in which, his team travelled along some of the most dangerous and uncharted rivers in the world from the Yukon to the USA as a celebration of British Columbia's centenary. He was also considered by Cubby Broccoli for the part of James Bond!

The next 16 chapters are filled with expeditions and explorations too numerous to mention here. They include his circumnavigating the globe via both Poles, his use of an old hacksaw to saw off the ends of two fingers lost to frostbite and so many other achievements and hardships it is difficult to believe they were all undertaken by one man. Liberally filled with anecdotal accounts - such as the briefest explanation of the Royal Scots Greys, this book answers questions I had not yet asked.

Throughout it all, however, there comes across an image of the man himself and of his love for his family. In an excellently crafted autobiography, we meet Ginny, his childhood sweetheart and later the wife he almost never won. We continuously learn of her active involvement and support in his many exploits until we finally discover her own unsuccessful fight against cancer. Her passing is recorded with such simple honesty that no reader will fail to feel her loss as though she were one of their own family. The darkness which followed is such that we find great relief in seeing this fine person eventually able to continue his life as before. Completing seven marathons in seven days on seven continents, he just persists in exciting and astounding those who observe. By the time he finds a new love and a new family, we have become so close to this "central character" that we find ourselves experiencing relief and wishing him well.

On finishing this, quite amazing, story, I was left with the clear impression that somehow this was only the beginning and that more was to come. Already, he has finally conquered Everest but I doubt that even that magnificent feat will be the finale to this man's performance in the role of living his own life. Of one thing, however, I can be certain; Nobody will record his feats better than the man himself and I eagerly await part two of this incredible journey. This book cannot disappoint any reader.

NM




5 out of 5 stars Mad, Bad & Dangerous   June 20, 2009
Ilya Grigorik (Toronto, ON, Canada)
2 out of 3 found this review helpful

Somehow I thought that the explorer stories such as the ones Ranulph Fiennes dedicated his life to are nothing but a thing of the past - it's all been done, right? Nothing further from the truth. A gripping autobiography about an amazing life story: SAS, mercenary in the middle east, world explorer, and an amazing speaker and author.

Ranulph offers a view into his childhood and education (a roller coaster, to say the least), his early years in the army, and his graduation for what most of us know him, his arctic expeditions! The book offers plenty of fascinating expedition stories and encounters with the extreme temperatures and situations - his determination makes you appreciate what we're all capable of if we put our minds to it.

As only aside, I strongly recommend you pick up the Audio CD presentation by Ranulph: "An Evening With Ranulph Fiennes". The content overlaps with the book, but offers a much more graphical perspective that will make you both laugh and cry in pain!



5 out of 5 stars If you want to know what life has to offer you...   June 14, 2009
J. WU (HK)
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

This book astounded me. Anyone who has a intrigued mind and wonders what life is all about or what is the purpose of living, he/she should read this book. It is by far the best adventure book I have ever read.

He's mad. And so are we.



5 out of 5 stars Humbling   March 21, 2008
Bo Østergaard Jepsen (Beijing, China)
9 out of 10 found this review helpful

Awesome is a sadly overused word these days, but I genuinely think it is the most fitting word to describe the man that is Ranulph Fiennes.

The life of Sir Ranulph Fiennes is the stuff of legends. Special Forces, mercenary, author, in consideration for the part of James Bond after Connery, arctic explorer, in fact "Worlds greatest living explorer" as judged by Guiness Book of World Records, ran 7 marathons in seven continents in seven days only half a year after bypass surgery. Not many people can, even with a bit of poetic liberty in their description, match the resume of Sir Fiennes.

In this gripping, well written, fantastic book, Sir Fiennes describes some 40 years of adventures and expeditions, including a stint in the service of the sultan of Oman, blowing up 20th century fox property, circumnavigation around the globe along the Greenwich meridian, amputating four fingers on his left hand in his garden shed, each and every single one of these stories in itself worthy of a book on its own.

There are many, many autobiografies on the market today. Most of them are from celebrities with less than extraordinary lives offering a bit of entertainment, but here we have a genuine, awe-inspiring, effulgent adventurer who has done it all telling his story. We learn of the physical stamina and the strength of will it takes to be an arctic explorer, of the sacrifices and bounties connected with that particular endeavor, and of the wonderful and dangerous place our earth can be.

In spite of his amazing track record, he is modest and down to earth. He doesn't claim to be the 'toughest man alive', but tells his story in a casual, humouristic, and self-deprecating manner. This book is not only the story of a man beyond the normal limits of physical and mental endurance, nor is it just a jolly good read, it is inspiring in the truest sence of the word. He even gives you advice on how to get going with your own arctic expedition.

One can not but feel strangely inadequate and humble, yet at the same time elated and inspired after reading this volume. It is in another sadly overused word, brilliant.

Highest possible recommendation.





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