Guests Jon Krakauer:
Bestselling author answers questions about his book, Into Thin Air.
Tim Cahill:
Outside's roving reporter recounts his adventures and mishaps
Steve "the General" Sheridan:
Neither broken bone nor ruptured spleen slows down the General
Carlos Carsolio:
A soft-spoken Mexican alpinist steps into mountaineering history
Lynn Hill:
What's next for the country's most accomplished rock climber?
Adrian and Alan Burgess:
Climbing's terrible twins chill out, kind of
Todd Skinner:
Part-time cowboy, part-time big wall climber, folks don't come much tougher
Eddie the Eagle:
Britain's unlikely ski-jumping hero
Scott Fischer:
A Q&A with the now-deceased mountain guide
Denis Hayes:
The Northwest's most influential environmentalist
Jon Krakauer:
On his book about a young man who perished in the Alaskan backcountry.
Dr. Phil Maffetone:
Fat is bad. Right? Maybe not, says Dr. Maffetone
Dana Gleason:
The inspiration behind Dana Design
Warren Miller:
Mike Steere peers into the brain of the madman of snow and celluloid
Kevin Delaney:
Rowdy, bleach-haired evangelist of snowboarding
Kitty Calhoun:
Her mild manner belies an ability to climb the world's most hostile mountains
Bill Pinkney:
First African-American to sail alone around the world
David Brower:
Can the 83-year-old environmental champion keep pace?
Marc Twight:
The most, um, tortured ice climber and poet
Jack LaLanne:
The original buff guy
Hal Clifford:
Author of The Falling Season
Greg Child:
Notes on Everest crowding
Bob Howells:
The inside scoop on little-known park gems
Greg LeMond:
America's greatest cyclist
Mike Steere:
Finds the best place to live
Features
Green wiring: Aldus millionaire Paul Brainerd ramps up the enviros
Jailhouse cowboys:
Wild horses and prison inmates
Onward, Clyde:
Pack Burro Racing in Colorado
Signature on line 16, please:
1996 Cycle Messenger World Championships
Himalaya Alpine-Style:
A new book celebrates climbing's finest style
Natural Selections September 1996:
Brook trout, Johnny Appleseed, grizzlies, and radioactive lanterns
October 1996:
Global warming, long winter
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