Jim Lanier had a good life going: a great family, a successful pathologist, a sometimes singer. Then he went to the dogs, ran the Iditarod in 1979, and has never recovered. With that ‘79 race as the book’s backb...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

Jim Lanier had a good life going: a great family, a successful pathologist, a sometimes singer. Then he went to the dogs, ran the Iditarod in 1979, and has never recovered. With that ‘79 race as the book’s backbone, Jim tells its tale—entertaining, exciting, occasionally informative, and mostly the truth. From the bustle of metropolitan Anchorage to Front Street in Nome, it’s no how to do. If anything, it’s a how not to—how not to prepare, how not to train, how not to run. On the other hand, it’s how not to give in to the urge to quit when the going gets tough, in life and in this metaphorical Iditarod.

Similar Products

Fast into the Night: A Woman, Her Dogs, and Their Journey North on the Iditarod TrailBack of the Pack: An Iditarod Rookie Musher's Alaska Pilgrimage to NomeThis Much CountryChampion of Alaskan Huskies: Joe Redington Sr. Father of the IditarodThe Cruelest Miles: The Heroic Story of Dogs and Men in a Race Against an EpidemicRace Across Alaska: First Woman to Win the Iditarod Tells Her StoryRunning with Champions: A Midlife Journey on the Iditarod TrailLife with Forty Dogs: Misadventures with Runts, Rejects, Retirees, and Rescues