The Last Season

by Eric Blehm

Hardcover, 2006

Call number

333.783 BLE

Collection

Publication

Harper (2006), Edition: 8th, 352 pages

Description

Destined to become a classic of adventure literature, The Last Season examines the extraordinary life of legendary backcountry ranger Randy Morgenson and his mysterious disappearance in California's unforgiving Sierra Nevada--mountains as perilous as they are beautiful. Eric Blehm's masterful work is a gripping detective story interwoven with the riveting biography of a complicated, original, and wholly fascinating man.

User reviews

LibraryThing member MrBobble
This book has inspired me to plan a hike in Sequoia and Kings Canyon this summer. Maybe in my next life I'll volunteer to be a backcountry ranger.
LibraryThing member bblum
Randy Morgenson, a seasonal back country ranger in Kings Canyon National Park disappears on patrol in 1996. This well written account of the search also is revealing about Randy, his childhood growing up in Yosemite, and the perennial issues of find yourself. I got immersered and read it in 2 days.
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Recommended even if you are a mountain rat.
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LibraryThing member GBev2009
Fascinating story of idealistic back country park Ranger Randy Morgenson and the search for him after he disappeared in King's Canyon National Park. The author paints a wonderful picture of Randy throughout his life; his love for the true wild places of nature and his struggle to balance his desire
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for summers alone in the wilderness and the stress it put on his marriage.

Morgenson is a tragic figure and proof that dreamers and idealists will struggle mightily in our cynical society.
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LibraryThing member BookWallah
This is a biography of a place. It is about a love affair with the Sierras. As an aside it is also about the story of one ranger, no scratch that, one Back Country Ranger. 28 seasons (yes, that is twenty-eight) in the wild country of the John Muir Trail, if that is not love then I do not know what
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is.

Randy Morgenson was a modern-day John Muir, a prophet for treading lightly in the wilderness. His unique childhood of growing up in Yosemite Valley with a naturalist for a father prepared him well for this life in the back country. Few books do such a good job at evoking such a strong sense of place. Although I have not hiked the JMT I have spent weeks climbing in the back country at both ends of the trail, and this book transported me back to that wild beauty, the Range of Light.

As good as he was in the natural environment, Randy was bereft of social skills as a friend or a husband. The book dwells a bit long in these areas and you would not miss too much by ripping a big chunk out of the middle. The commentary on the National Park Service not honoring their summer work force and being slow to implement a more modern communication system is sad but true. The coverage of the Search and Rescue is gripping. The personal people dramas are not as interesting.

One brief spoiler on the plot and the ending, "Nature Always Wins."

Overall the book is not as gripping as a Jon Krakauer, but a close second. Few books will take you closer to the soul of the Sierras. Highly recommended for all lovers of good mountain literature.
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LibraryThing member sarahfrierson
Randy Morgenson spent 28 seasons as a backcountry ranger in the High Sierras. It's possible to say that no one knew more about the area and what it took to survive there than him. Without a doubt, no one had a greater love for the land. So no one expected what happened in the summer of 1996.

Randy
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Morgenson vanished.

Did he want to disappear? Was there an accident? Could he have been murdered? Did problems from the off-season spill into the backcountry and lead him to suicide?

All of these questions are confronted as this book combines the mystery of Randy's disappearance with the story of Randy's life, the tales of the backcountry and an intricate portrait of a modern search and rescue mission. Eric Blehm pieces together parts of Randy's own journals and logbooks with hundreds of interviews of friends, family and coworkers to combine each of these parts of the story seamlessly.

Blehm does a good job of building suspense and propelling the reader deeper into the book, so anyone who likes a mystery will probably enjoy this book. But, for those who have any interest in the outdoors, national parks, search and rescue operations, or anyone who has enjoyed Jon Krakauer's books, you are sure to like it!
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LibraryThing member RuthMorrison
A true mystery that kept me wondering about the feelings
and circumstances that influenced the situation. The book made
me appreciate the love of a naturalist.
LibraryThing member BenjaminHahn
An enjoyable true-life missing person story from the King's Canyon National Parks region. I believe the story first showed up as a magazine piece in Outside. The first 100 pages or so took me a bit to get into. Eric Blehm's writing style at first seemed a little over the top in regards to how he
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described some of the wilderness areas the story is set in. It seemed at times that he was writing for an audience that never visited a national park, much less hiked on an overnight trip. Sentences like these, describing Randy’s spartan conditions, got on my nerves:
“Hardly the log cabin vision that the words ‘ranger station’ evoke, the primitive residence was little more than a 12-by15-foot canvas tent set up on a plywood platform.” (page 6)
Well, yes, that’s what rangers in the field usually stay in. It’s called a wall tent. I go hiking maybe twice a season, so I am no weekend warrior, but everyone has seen these in the parks. Perhaps I’m being picky, but I do feel that it is more likely that the people who are going to read this book might be more wilderness oriented folks. I could be wrong. But over the last month, I have mentioned this book to students and co workers and all of the ones who have read it are avid hikers and backpackers. Regardless, it’s an entertaining book that did appeal to this fan of the wilderness. After I got to page 100, the remaining 250 pages went by fast.
Some thoughts on the story (spoilers below):
Randy Morgenson is our main character, a back country ranger of some 28 consecutive seasons working in the national park. A bonafide mountain man. Blehm weaves Morgenson's upbringing and life into chapters that cover the 60's to 90's with other chapters which focus on the Search and Rescue operation to find him in 1996. The background chapters provide context for the SAR chapters. The main background themes for Randy include his love for the wilderness, his untraditional marriage with his wife Judi, and his somewhat selfish and uncompromising sense of environmentalism. Blehm does a pretty good job of taking the materials available to him (journals, ranger log books, anecdotes, ect) and creating a character for us to feel anxious for.
The SAR chapters were interesting to me because I felt I was learning about all the particular details that go into managing such a huge search and rescue operation in a wilderness area famous for swallowing bodies and never giving them up. It was a little like CSI in a national park.
Both sets of chapters gave a sense of how divided and splintered the NPS bureaucracy has become. Particularly on ways that seasonal staff and "lifers" are treated differently. The book does paint a picture that is 15 years old, so perhaps things have changed.
Much of the tension in the book is built upon what actually happened to Randy. Is he dead? Did he meet a terrible accident? Is he alive but can't be found? Did he commit suicide? Was there foul play? Did he simply leave the park and go to Mexico? Fortunately, this is not one of those books that leaves the question unanswered. The book ends with a fairly clear answer. This however, is where I became a little disappointed. Randy's body is found and the evidence provided is clear that is was merely an accident. Blehm, in my opinion, though gives a little too much credence to some of the fanciful supernatural anecdotes that pop up throughout this story. For instance, a hiker has a vision of Randy floating in a pool of water. Judi has a dream about Randy in the bottom of a lake? Randy is eventually found in a creek after probably falling into a frozen lake further up stream. Coincidence or were some people being alerted via psychic powers? Come on, seriously? I think it’s safe to say that there were probably lots of people involved in the SAR that were having nightmares about all sorts of scenarios: cliffs, avalanches, foul play? It's a stressful operation and it wouldn't surprise me of lots of hunches were being mentioned. It just so happens that Randy did fall in a frozen lake and there happened to be a hiker who had a vision about a man trapped underwater and/or Judi having a dream about Randy at the bottom of a lake. However, it seems that Blehm is just searching for evidence that fits this one fanciful theory instead of the other way around, aka the scientific method.
You could say that Blehm is just merely telling the story that people told him. But think of it this way, Blehm was also told about an alien abduction theory, which is also ludicrous, and he only gives that theory 2 sentences. Why give page upon page to these other ludicrous theories? Hmm, perhaps to satisfy the paranormal fan? Fine, but paranormal fan I am not, and giving it fair weight with the more rational theories weakens the book in my opinion.
Skeptical criticism aside, the human drama played out on these pages does satisfy. I could go on about the bad taste that Randy's particular sense of ecological balance left in my mouth, but I'll save that for an Edward Abbey review. The memory of Randy get’s enough flak from the marital problems hung out to dry in this book. Overall though, still a good read with some good sleuthing, psychological profiling, all set in a backcountry wilderness. If you love hanging out in the woods, going hiking, or just like true mysteries, this book is for you.
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LibraryThing member she_climber
The book spoke to me, like none has for quite sometime. It was part mystery, part adventure, part poetry. Perfect book to read as spring is coming on. I am itching to get outdoors and do some camping, hiking and backpacking and enjoy all the great outdoors has to offer. I want to see if I can see
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the world as Randy Morgenson, uber backcountry ranger extraordinarie, before he went missing in the High Sierras. But I will be sure to remember that Mother Nature is always in charge.
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LibraryThing member Stbalbach
The Last Season is an excellent work of outdoor literature. The mystery of a missing person drives it forward using the braided narrative technique of current investigation layered with flashbacks to the past. But it's also a sympathetic biography of a respected forest ranger, and details about
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life as a ranger and the Sierra mountains. It's ultimately a somewhat dark story with no real happy ending for the Morgenson clan. But the example of Randy Morgenson perhaps offers some lessons, not too dissimilar from Christopher McCandless.
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LibraryThing member breic
I very much wanted to like this book. I love the High Sierra and nature writing. I found some of the details on backcountry ranger life and culture to be fascinating, as well as some details on search and rescue operations.

But overall the book feels like a hugely stretched-out magazine article. It
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is highly repetitive. There are too many details, often not even adding atmosphere.

The mystery is largely solved in the end. The resolution was a bit of a letdown. Perhaps it would have meant more if it had come 100 or 200 pages earlier, before the endless journaling had exhausted me.
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LibraryThing member Carmenere
I'm disappointed with myself for taking so long to read this book about National Park Service Ranger Randy Morgenson. For 28 seasons Randy was a Rangers Ranger making the backcountry of Sequoia & King Canyon National Parks his seasonal home. He felt one with the trees, animals, mountain and meadow.
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He was truly in his element.
His final season at King Canyon, however, was fraught with complexities and sadness. So, when Ranger Morgenson becomes a missing person within the park those who knew him best deduced different scenarios. A full out manhunt ensues with inconclusive results....Until the results become evident.
Although, Randy's life and rise through the park system were interesting it is the authors descriptive prose that captured my imagination and made me yearn to hike on the trails, gaze upon mountain peaks and run through meadows. Blehm invites the reader into one of our national treasures and gain appreciation for the, poorly paid, men and women who provide a sometimes harrowing service as well as a means of educating the public.
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LibraryThing member Pferdina
This is the story of Randy Morgenson, who was a legendary backcountry ranger at Sequoia & King's Canyon National Parks for almost 30 summers. He loved the mountains and being alone in the wilderness. In July 1996, while on a patrol, he disappeared without a trace. This book describes his life as
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well as the massive search that was launched to find him.
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LibraryThing member Okies
I read this sometime in the past 3 years and when I started the audiobook again recently, it flooded back to me. I found it just as riveting as I did the first time.

The author rolls the story out very well, and introduces us to a parade of characters to help reveal the man at the centre of the
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mystery.
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Awards

Barnes and Noble Discover Great New Writers Award (Winner — Non-Fiction — 2006)
National Outdoor Book Award (Winner — History/Biography — 2006)

Pages

352

ISBN

0060583002 / 9780060583002
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