Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
When I Fell From the Sky
When I Fell From the Sky: The True Story of One Woman's Miraculous Survival | Juliane Koepcke
4 posts | 2 read | 7 to read
On Christmas Eve 1971, the packed LANSA flight 508 from Lima to Pucallpa was struck by lightning and went down in dense jungle hundreds of miles from civilization. Of its 93 passengers, only one survived. Juliane Koepcke, the seventeen-year-old child of famous German zoologists. She'd been thrown from the plane two miles above the forest canopy, but had sustained only a broken collarbone and a cut on her leg. With incredible courage, instinct and ingenuity, she survived three weeks in the "green hell" of the Amazon - using the skills she'd learned in assisting her parents on their research trips into the jungle - before coming across a loggers hut, and, with it, safety. Now she tells her fascinating story for the first time, and in doing so tells us about her 'Gerald Durrell' childhood - with a menagerie of wild, exotic and sometimes dangerous pets - about how she learned to survive at her parents ecological station deep in the rainforest and about her present-day commitment to this wildlife as a biologist and dedicated environmentalist.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
review
Chrys
post image
Pickpick

I was expecting the story to be her survival after the crash, but while that event has colored her whole life the book was more than just that. There were parts about her growing up in Peru a child of scientists studying the rainforest. Interspersed also was her current efforts to make her parents research station into a nature reserve. Having heard her tale from my Dad (an outdoorsman) when I was young I really enjoyed being able to read it.

blurb
Chrys
post image

One of my current reads. True story of a woman who, at age 17, survived a plane crash into the jungle and walked her way out over the course of 11 days. Right now she is describing growing up the child of two scientists in Peru studying the wildlife. I wish I could go back in time and visit them there.