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Deep Powder Snow, by Dolores LaChapelle
Reviewed by Lou Dawson [shop for this book]

Doloris (Doris) Lachapelle doesn't pull any punches in her book, Deep Powder Snow. If you telemark, you won't like what she says about you. If you ride a snowmobile, you are definitely not cool. If you're Catholic, you won't like her take on your religion. Yet somehow, though having been both in the telemark position and on a snowmobile – and even attended Mass on occasion, I rose above my sinful nature and enjoyed what Dolores has to say.

In a nutshell, LaChapelle shares her initiation and subsequent religion of powder skiing. Now that's something I can get my skis into!

It goes something like this. Back in the golden age of skiing, when guys with names like Alf, Sverre, and Cormier were the bronzed snow gods who showed Americans how-tu-du-ittt, Lachapelle learns a turn called the single dipsy, a precursor to the technique employed by most of today's powder skiers. The single dipsy allowed her to "turn where few could."

And turn she did. Through years with Alta's legendary snow, Aspen's founding 10th Mountain Troopers, and points in between, Lachapelle literally becomes one with the earth by letting "snow and gravity together" turn her skis. In the process, she becomes one of the West's most prolific and best known powder skiers, and develops a radical personal philosophy that meshes tightly with the Deep Ecology movement.

Dolores at Alta in the 1950s.

Deep Ecology holds (in short) that if humans blend with the earth, all our political and environmental problems will be solved. LaChapelle's uses skiing to explain, "There is no longer an I and snow and mountain, but a continuous flowing interaction. I cannot tell where my actions end and the snow takes over...That's deep ecology!" Using her experiences of mountain living and powder skiing, Lachapelle leads us through the development of her beliefs. She quotes from Alan Watts, and at length from philosopher Martin Heidegger, a German savant who skied with his students to teach them his ideas.

For me the book operated on two levels. I could cruse and enjoy LaChapelle's account of how American skiing grew up -- while I schussed over the more obtuse philosophical paragraphs. Or, I'd cut my pace in half, and linger over her ideas of earth, man and skis. In the end, I read the book twice.

In case you're wondering, Doris does get slapped a few times. Her marriage doesn't work, and she gets kicked by an avalanche. Thus, her book has a more earthy feel than others of the "new-age" genre, which sometimes wax over realities of life as a human being. Rest assured, Doris doesn't just get caught in a slide. Instead, she wakes up in a body cast, then weaves the slide into her struggle with marriage, sexuality and religion.

Powder skiing is a potent experience. Social groups are built around it, and it is a big part of many a personal philosophy. Indeed, snow has been one of the prime forces along my spiritual path. Here is one powder pilgrim who put it in writing -- who wants to share it with you. You may not agree with everything Doris Lachapelle says, but her words come from her heart, and they're not sanitized by the scourge of Political Correctness. If powder snow has ever been part of your life, I urge you to give this book a few turns on the couch.

[shop for this book]

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