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On 13 October 1972, the members of a top Uruguayan rugby team were flying over the Andes to play in Chile. Their plane crashed into a mountain and was stranded 11,000 feet up on an inhospitable glacier. Many died instantly in the crash, including the person sitting next to Nando, but others survived. They had almost no food or suitable equipment to withstand temperatures as low as -35C, and had to eat the bodies of their dead team-mates to survive. With the prospect only of a slow death, and no rescue likely, Nando and one of his friends set off on an impossible journey, walking and climbing for ten days in search of help. Finally, after 72 days, the 16 survivors were brought to safety.
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'Parrado tells it from the inside - and, with the oily piousness of the ALIVE version cleaned away, the immediacy of this 30-something-years-old story is extraordinary. In fact, it's up there with Al Lansing's classic account of Shackleton in the Antarctic, ENDURANCE, as one of the very best real-life, boy's-own, cliffhanging adventures of our times; and Parado comes across as the sort of guy who'd be good to out for a drink with. A DRINK, I said…'
Arminta Wallace
THE IRISH TIMES
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