The way out A true story of survival in the heart of the Rockies

Devon O'Neil, 1979-

Book - 2025

A harrowing, never-before-told story of life and death in the Colorado mountains-thirty hours that changed lives forever and forced a reckoning about the cost of adventure. "You wanna ski a lap?" Fifteen-year-old Cole Walters-Schaler couldn't resist. This was why they'd come to the backcountry, after all--three fathers and four teenage children together for a bonding alpine getaway outside Salida, Colorado, in January 2017. Within minutes, Cole and Brett Beasley, a longtime Forest Service ranger and expert outdoorsman in his mid-forties, had pushed off from their cabin, expecting to be gone for a half hour or so. But an unforgiving blizzard transformed their quick jaunt into a thirty-hour ordeal that would end in tragedy..., as the community raced to find them. The Way Out is the story of those ensuing hours and their aftermath--an almost unbelievable event that shook a tight-knit mountain community and raised difficult questions about life and death, guilt and redemption, and the pursuit of adventure. Why, when we know that the wilderness can kill, can't we stay away? When the unthinkable happens, how does a community forgive the survivors? And how do the survivors forgive themselves? Drawing on firsthand interviews with those closest to the tragedy, including the key eyewitness, and written with the gripping intensity of classics such as Into Thin Air and Touching the Void, O'Neil recreates that fateful day. The Way Out is a thoughtful investigation of the allure of the mountains and the aftermath of trauma, and an unforgettable look at life at its very edge. The Way Out includes 12 black-and-white personal photos throughout.

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Coming Soon
  • Prologue
  • Part 1. The Hut Trip
  • Chapter 1. Departure
  • Chapter 2. Young Man, Gone West
  • Chapter 3. A Family Unmoored
  • Chapter 4. Girl Dad
  • Part 2. The Search
  • Chapter 5. Trapped
  • Chapter 6. Thin Lines
  • Chapter 7. The Mission
  • Chapter 8. The Curse
  • Chapter 9. Tragedy/Miracle
  • Part 3. The Reckoning
  • Chapter 10. Even Rainbows End
  • Chapter 11. Hollow Gains
  • Chapter 12. Is It Worth It?
  • Chapter 13. Dawn
  • Chapter 14. Freed
  • Acknowledgments
  • Credits and Permissions
Review by Booklist Review

On the morning of January 3, 2017, three men and four of their teen kids drove from their town of Salida, Colorado, up to Leadville, from which they would cross-country ski six miles into the woods to a collection of huts built by the U.S. military during WWII. The following morning, one of the dads--Brett Beasly, a U.S. Forest Service ranger and outdoorsman extraordinaire--asked equally spirited teen Cole Schaler, "You wanna ski a lap?" Unequipped with basic survival gear or even warm clothes, with snow quickly accumulating, the pair soon became lost. By the next day, one of them had perished, and the other was barely alive when he was found. With both delicacy and solid reporting, O'Neil recounts the events that unfolded before and after this tragic event, setting them against a Rocky Mountain environment both perilous and jaw-droppingly inspiring, a small, blue-collar town that had already lost too many residents, and the terrible second-guessing of life-altering decisions that were made, or not made, in the blink of an eye. A story of surprising depth and power.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.