Rick Ridgeway, along with Yvon Chouinard (founder of Patagonia), Doug Tompkins (founder of North Face), and a varied group of climbers and businessmen, formed what they called the Do-Boys (and at the end, one Do-Gal), whose goal was to explore the highest and farthest reaches of our planet.
The Do-Boys climbed, kayaked, hauled carts across the desert, and did just about every other crazy adventure one could think of. But that said, over the course of the years, Ridgeway was involved with a number of trips where people died. While his trips were generally well financed and planned expeditions, it felt like the Do-Boys took more unnecessary risks than someone like Ed Viesturs, another amazing climber whose book I read, about climbing all the 8,000 meter peaks without supplemental oxygen (first American to do so).
Viesturs took a much more careful, calculated approach, once stopping just a few hundred feet below a very important 8,000 meter summit - one he might never see again, just because he judged the conditions that day to be too risky. I feel like this is the kind of risk Ridgeway and his group might well have taken.
All in all, a super fun read, not only about the adventures of the Do-Boys, but also about the conservation efforts of Chouinard and Tompkins, two very wealthy men who have used their fortunes to conserve as much wilderness as they can. Chouinard only a month ago put his company in trust to ensure profits go toward mitigating climate change. Tompkins used his wealth from North Face and Esprit to buy immense tracts of land in Argentina and Chile, which have been used to create several immense parks.
As a writer, I can't say Ridgeway is the best outdoor journalist I've ever read. The book reads more like a letter to a friend, but the stories and messages come through loud and clear, and in the end, that's what really counts with a book like this. A big thumbs up from me.