Angels in the Wilderness
The True Story of One Woman’s Survival Against All Odds
Amy Racina

Solo backpacker Amy Racina fell sixty feet onto solid granite near the remote Tehipite Valley in California’s Kings Canyon National Park in the Sierra Nevada during a 16-day solo hiking trip. In this gripping first-person account, Amy tells how she survived four days and nights in the wilderness with both legs badly broken and no one else around, clinging tenaciously to life, using all the spiritual tools and inner strengths she could muster. Battling pain, fear and exhaustion, she pulled herself along with her hands, and refused to give up even when her chances of salvation were remote.
The book chronicles her miraculous and timely rescue and describes her dramatic airlift out of the canyon, swinging helplessly from two straps, dangling fearfully beneath a helicopter high above the ravine where she had lain.
Racina recounts her struggles with multiple surgeries and extensive physical rehabilitation, as she fought to walk again despite her severe injuries. In flashbacks, Amy also tells of her rugged introduction to wilderness backpacking, her “trip of a lifetime” up to the day of her fall, and her dual passions for solo hiking and traveling light. She also describes the deeper reflections that shaped her life after the fall, and concludes with her triumphant return to the wilderness.
This amazing tale of despair, courage and hope speaks of incredible strength and heartbreaking weakness as Amy details what she believed might be the last days of her life. It is a memory of the darkest of times and an affirmation of miracles. Her story is a celebration of a life almost snatched away, of survival against the odds.
“A profound true story of human courage and the will to live.”
~Midwest Book Review
220 pages, 6-1/8" x 9-1/4", full-color dust jacket, 25 photographs, 2 maps.
Published by Elite Books. ISBN 0-9710888-9-6 hardcover
$24.95
“Every day is a good day for Amy Racina. It wasnÃt always that way, but crashing 60 feet into a granite ravine changed her perspective.”
~ San Francisco Chronicle
“Her story is by any measure a triumph of will.”
~ Santa Rosa Press Democrat
“As a story of human courage and persistence, it is unparalleled. As a parable that challenges us to find the best within ourselves, it is remarkable. As an honest and beautifully written story, it is searing. And as a reminder that in the most desperate of circumstances, grace, humor, wisdom and the gentle touch of God’s spirit are available, it is profound.”
~ Dawson Church, Publisher
Here’s two brief excerpts:
The land itself is my friend. Nature speaks to me in a way that humankind cannot. As I walk, the simplicity of the trailside ways comforts me. The crisp clarity of the mountain air heals me; the high sweet light glistening on white slabs of granite lends me its radiance and restores to me the light of my own essence.
My spirit exults, bringing my body and soul into perfect focus. My heart expands. I am like my sleeping bag, stuffed too long in a sack, and let out at last. Up above timberline, single pine trees quiver in the relentless brightness, tall and strong, as I feel myself to be. The wilderness touches the pure high note that sings forth the harmony of my own spirit.
~ from Chapter 15: “The Lure of the Solo Experience”
“We’ve rescued a lot of people,” says Debbie... the foremost rescue ranger in the National Park Service. “But rarely anyone as badly injured as Amy, and never anyone as happy.” Of course I am happy. I am going to live. I had not expected it to be so.
~ from Chapter 21: “ Rescue ”
The Table of Contents:
- The Fall
- For Love of the Mountains
- On the Trail of the Ancestors
- The Trip of a Lifetime
- Before the Fall
- The Day of the Fall
- In the Ravine
- A Dozen Ways to Die
- Talking to God
- The Go-Lite Girl
- The First Day
- Pain
- Longing for Life
- The Second Day
- The Lure of the Solo Experience
- The Third Day
- Two Toots of a Whistle
- Contact
- The Three Rescuers
- The Fourth Day
- Rescue
- Dangling by a Thread
- Repairing Amy
- An Unknown Wilderness
- Almira
- Helping Amy
- The Purple Ambulance
- At Carla’s
- Many Firsts
- Many Heroes
- Like a Junkyard Dog
- The Questions
- After the Fall
- Gifts and Revelations
- Spritual Tools for Physical Survival
- Gratitude
- Back to the Mountains
Books and Maps on Related Topics:
Bluewater Gold Rush; The Odyssey of a California Sea Urchin Diver by Tom Kendrick Chugach State Park/Chugach Mountains, Alaska Topographic Recreation Map by Imus Geographics The Hotel on the Roof of the World: From Miss Tibet to Shangri La by Alec LeSueur Day Trips with a Splash—The Swimming Holes of California by Pancho Doll Solu-Khumbu: The Trek to Everest—A Photographic Journal by Tim Hauf Day Trips With A Splash: Southeastern Swimming Holes by Pancho Doll Wild Pigs: The Mountain Bike Adventure Guide to the Pacific Coast by John Zilly One Hundred Mile Summers by Eleanor Guilford To Travel Hopefully by by Christopher Rush
A Day in the Ancient Bristlecone Pine Forest by Photographs by Dennis Flaherty, Essays by Mark A. Schlenz
Exploring Eastern Sierra Canyons: Sonora Pass to Pine Creek by Sharon Giacomazzi The High Sierra of California by Poems and Journals by Gary Snyder, Woodcuts by Tom Killion The Palisades Trail Map by Tom Harrison Mammoth Area Rock Climbs, 3rd Edition by Marty Lewis & John Moynier, Foreword by Errett Allen The Good, The Great and the Awesome: Top 40 High Sierra Rock Climbs by Peter Croft, Foreword by Galen Rowell Exploring The Eastern Sierra: California & Nevada by Mark A. Schlenz, Photography by Dennis Flaherty Sierra Nevada Topographic Map by Imus Geographics
The Hiker's hip pocket Guide to Sonoma County, 3rd edition by Bob Lorentzen Hiking the California Coastal Trail Volume Two: Monterey to Mexico--The Guide to Walking the Golden State's Beaches and Bluffs from Border to Border by Bob Lorentzen and Richard Nichols The Mendocino Coast Glove Box Guide, 3rd Edition--Lodgings, Eateries, Sights, History, Activities and More by Bob Lorentzen
Beyond the Golden Gate: California’s North Coast by Photography by Larry Ulrich Essay by Roy Parvin Preface by Donna Bacon Ulrich
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