Marco Siffredi was the first person to make a complete snowboard descent of Mount Everest in 2001, and was regarded by many as the world’s best snowboarder. But the following year in 2002, Marco mysteriously disappeared on Everest while attempting a more difficult route known as Hornbein Couloir, an unrelentingly steep, difficult to access route with a high failure rate. Using exclusive never-before-granted interviews with family and friends, Evans aims to solve Everest's greatest mystery in nearly a century while exploring Marco's pursuit of a dream, his love of freedom and adventure, and how his French family was forever altered by his loss.
Marco Siffredi was the first person to make a complete snowboard descent of Mount Everest in 2001, and was regarded by many as the world’s best snowboarder. But the following year in 2002, Marco mysteriously disappeared on Everest while attempting a more difficult route known as Hornbein Couloir, an unrelentingly steep, difficult to access route with a high failure rate. Using exclusive never-before-granted interviews with family and friends, Evans aims to solve Everest's greatest mystery in nearly a century while exploring Marco's pursuit of a dream, his love of freedom and adventure, and how his French family was forever altered by his loss.
Jeremy Evans is a climber, snowboarder, award-winning journalist, and the author of The Battle for Paradise and In Search of Powder. Through his writing and adventures, he has connected with the most influential people in the climbing and skiing/snowboarding industries and encouraged them to tell their stories. This was most evident with subjects in the outdoor adventure field where Jeremy has been able to connect with climbers, skiers, and snowboarders worldwide.
"Marco was a purist, an athlete drawn to the bold and dangerous.
Jeremy Evans humanizes Marco in a way that makes his disappearance
a cautionary, yet inspiring, tale of someone who lived with
purpose. But like most great stories with daring protagonists, we
wished Marco's life could have ended differently." —Jimmy Chin,
Emmy Award winning cinematographer and co-director of Academy
Award-winning film Free Solo
“Marco was a beautiful human who lived life on the edge in Chamonix
and in the Himalaya. He danced on that boundary of life and death
every day. We will always miss him, but See You Tomorrow reveals
another side of Marco we didn't know, the one of a kind, gentle and
innocent soul who left us too soon." —Jeremy Jones, professional
snowboarder
"Gripping. Scary. A fascinating glimpse into the world of extreme
athletes who risk everything to follow their passion, live by their
own rules, and die without regret. Marco lived a high-stakes
adventure at extreme altitude that defies comprehension." —Diedre
Wolownick, author of The Sharp End of Life and the mother of rock
climber Alex Honnold from the Academy Award-winning film Free
Solo
NetGalley Reviews5 starsLast updated on 30 Jan 2021"See You
Tomorrow by Jeremy Evans is a fascinating look into the life of
French snowboarder and mountaineer, Marco Siffredi. While Evans
focuses on Siffredi's disappearance as he tried to snowboard down
Everest, we also learn a bit about Siffredi's family and what he
was like growing up. Marco Siffredi was a child prodigy when it
came to snowboarding. He was so good at it that in only six years
he went from being a novice to being considered the best in the
world. He was fascinated with the impossible and he said "If we
don't do stuff that is a bit crazy at 20, we're not going to start
at 50." Siffredi did the crazy stuff; he decided he wanted to
snowboard down Everest. He summited Everest on May 23, 2001 but was
unable to snowboard down Horbein Couloir, the steepest descent from
the summit, because of snow conditions, so he came down a less
dangerous way, becoming the first person to make a complete descent
of Mount Everest on a snowboard. So on September 8, 2002, at age
23, he decided to try again. He reached the summit taking three
times as long as he had done it previously and even though the
sherpas accompanying him tried to talk him out of it, he began to
descend Everest on the Horbein Couloir route on his snowboard.
Marco Siffredi was never seen again. People disappear on Everest
regularly, that is not unusual, but what is unusual with Siffredi
are the rumors surrounding his disappearance. The theories range
from he fell into a ravine to his sister believing that he made it
down and is still alive today. Evans did extensive research on this
book, and was granted first ever interviews with Siffredi's family
and friends. This is an excellent book and I highly recommend it.
Thank you to NetGalley, the author, and the publisher for providing
me with a digital copy of this book prior to publication in
exchange for my review. This review is being posted immediately to
my GoodReads account and will be posted on Amazon and Barnes and
Noble upon the book's publication."—Donna Boyd, Educator at Reading
Enrichment/Literacy Group (Homeschooling)5 starsLast updated on 19
Feb 2021"Thank you to NetGalley and Jeremy Evans for giving me an
ARC of this book."It was very interesting because it essentially
had three distinct subjects. First there is, of course, the
biography of a young , dynamic and highly skilled athlete. Second
is the history of Everest and the surrounding area. Third is the
history of climbing and other extreme snow sports. "I liked that
the author didn't just tell us about this young guy who seems to
have no impulse control and who is fairly oblivious to danger. All
of that is very interesting and kind of fun in an "I wish I was
that brave" kind of way. But the author then adds in the dynamics
of he town of Chamonix where he lived and learned to ski, climb,
snowboard and guide tourists up the mountain. Then he gives us a
history of other men who climbed Everest and also never came back,
or died on the mountain and were brought down. It is an interesting
intermingling that gives a broader picture of Marco and his
life."—Fianna MacGregor, Educator at Whitman Legal4 starsLast
updated on 01 Mar 2021"As an avid hiker, ice climber and mountain
trekker I have always been enamoured by tales from “the 8000ers”. I
myself will never be up to the task of climbing one, but I’ve
always enjoyed following the challenges and setbacks of those who
do. I often read these stores via Alan Annette (referenced in this
book), explorersweb, Outside Magazine or other trekking
publications. Where others enjoy “true crime” I do admit to finding
myself fixated with the tales of those challenged or lost on these
peaks. My first introduction to these tales were Jon Krakauer’s
‘Into Thin Air’ and the 1998 Everest IMAX film, and since then I’ve
read a wide range and collection of these accounts of mountain
(mis)adventures. "See You Tomorrow reads like a hybrid between the
online articles, and longer books I’ve encountered on the subject.
I mean that in the best way possible. Jeremy Evans writes with the
casual nature of someone integrated into the climbing and
mountaineering community, who has first hand knowledge and
experience he relates back to the story being told. I was in the
peak of my high school ski-bum years when Marco Siffredi made the
first Everest descent, and then subsequently disappeared the
following year but until reading this book I didn’t know the
genuine nature of his personality, or the complexities of his
relationship with Chamonix. Jeremy Evans is finally doing what the
community should have done long ago, celebrating this tremendous
athlete and heartfelt human for the accomplishments he achieved and
life he lived. I also thought intertwining Marco’s story with his
favourite character The Little Prince was incredibly successful
thematically. I wouldn’t usually describe a book about someone’s
tragic disappearance as “heartwarming” but I appreciated that
Jeremy focused more on Marco’s life than his death. "I would highly
recommend this book to anyone interested in outdoor adventure
sports, especially snowboarding (or skiing), mountaineering,
trekking or even those with an interest in reading well written
biographies. I truly appreciate the opportunity to read this
digital ARC provided by NetGalley, I was not compensated for this
review."—Katherine Job, Reviewer at Garddwest4 starsLast updated on
02 May 2021"This is the story of Marco Siffredi a young man from
Chamonix France who at the age of 23 passed away on Mount Everest
or so they believe. Chamonix is famous for being the birth place of
mountaineering and extreme skiing. This is a beautiful place for
the tourist and the rich and beautiful but it is also a place that
mothers have fear every time the rescue helicopter passes overhead.
Marco did not involved with climbing until his teenage years but he
seemed to have a natural gift which rubbed those who had been
snowboarding their whole life. But Marco was the type of person
people could not help be attracted to as he was genuine and just
happy go lucky. The story should this when he was preparing for the
assent of Everest he was riding his skateboard around and giving
children rides. Base on first appearance you would not guess this
with his piercings and green or purple hair. This book is a good
look at mountaineering along with the extreme snowboarding there is
adventure and sadness but this is a good read."—Thomas Kelley,
Consumer Reviewer4 starsLast updated on 03 May 2021"Part adventure
story, part historical narrative, this book highlights the story of
Marco Siffredi's attempt to be the first to snowboard the Hornbein
Couloir on Mt. Everest after successfully snowboarding down Everest
the year before."This book is very thorough and includes a lot of
history that goes beyond Siffredi's attempts and also delves deeply
into his background growing up in Chamonix. It's an interesting
psychological profile of the type of person who attempts things
that most people wouldn't even contemplate, and the latter chapters
of the book do try to unravel the mystery of what might have
happened to Siffredi in 2002."Those who have enjoyed other
mountaineering books should definitely include this one on their
"to be read" list, but the story itself isn't completely satisfying
because the mystery of Siffredi's death is unsolved, and frankly,
there's a fair amount of detail that feels more like filler than
critical to the tale. I personally found the filler parts
interesting in their own right because I am fascinated with Everest
and the people who climb it, but those looking for more suspense
and exhilaration may not feel the same. Photos showing the Couloir
and perhaps a map of Siffredi's possible routes really would have
been a plus."—Anita Pomerantz, Consumer Reviewer
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