An Oral History of Extreme Sports
By A Mystery Man Writer
Description
In the waning decades of the 20th century, men from New Zealand began inventing new ways to injure themselves. They jumped from bridges with elastic bands attached to their ankles, ran class-five rapids without boats, and fixed themselves to large kites to achieve great speed. Soon enough, a culture had emerged—one that paired backyard engineering with the pursuit of adrenaline. Today, thanks to these pioneers, brave souls the world over may hurtle through the air, down mountains and up rivers and live to brag about it.
We Are the Giants!
Mad Max: Fury Road': The Oral History of a Modern Action Classic - The New York Times
Thames & Hudson USA - Book - 500 Years Later: An Oral History of Final Fantasy VII
Why are people drawn to extreme sports?
An oral history of the Disney Channel Original Movie
Lost: An Oral History of the Daring, Divisive 'The End
Marcia Greenberger Oral History Interview, Part 2
An Oral History of Oakleys, the Most Badass Sunglasses of the 1990s
47 Kite buggy-Ideen jacht, kitesurfen, fahrzeuge
47 Kite buggy-Ideen jacht, kitesurfen, fahrzeuge
Archives, oral history and oral tradition: a RAMP study
L.A. LOOKS Extreme Sport Tri-Active Hold 20 oz, Blue
Bungee jumping Bungee jumping, Cute questions, Adventure sports
Thames & Hudson USA - Book - 500 Years Later: An Oral History of Final Fantasy VII
from
per adult (price varies by group size)