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Susan Purvis

    Susan Purvis combines her extensive experience as a wilderness medical expert and instructor with a passion for teaching critical thinking in challenging environments. Her writing explores themes of survival, resilience, and decision-making under pressure, drawing from expeditions to Earth's most extreme locales. Purvis's narratives aim to equip readers with the ability to analyze situations and act decisively, whether navigating remote wilderness or facing life's unexpected obstacles. Her work inspires a spirit of exploration and a preparedness for the unknown.

    Go Find: My Journey to Find the Lost--And Myself
    • 2018

      "Somewhere between hunting for gold in Latin America as a geologist and getting married to a new husband, thirty-three-year-old Susan Purvis loses her way. Susan comes to believe that a puppy and working on ski patrol at the last great ski town in Colorado will improve her life. When she learns about avalanches that bury people without warning, she challenges herself: ''What if I teach a dog to save lives?'' This quest propels her to train the best possible search dog, vowing to never leave anyone behind. With no clue how to care for a houseplant, let alone a dog, she chooses a five-week-old Labrador retriever, Tasha. With the face of a baby bear and the temperament of an NFL linebacker, Tasha constantly tests Susan's determination to transform her into a rescue dog. Susan and Tasha jockey for alpha position as they pursue certification in avalanche, water, and wilderness recovery. Susan eventually learns to truly communicate with Tasha by seeing the world through her dog's nose. As the first female team in a male-dominated search-and-rescue community, they face resistance at every turn. They won't get paid even a bag of kibble for their efforts, yet they launch dozens of missions to rescue the missing or recover the remains of victims of nature and crime. Training with Tasha in the field to find, recover, and rescue the lost became Susan's passion. But it was also her circumstance -- she was in many ways as lost as anyone she ever pulled out of an avalanche or found huddled in the woods. ''Lostness'' doesn't only apply to losing the trail. People can get lost in a relationship, a business, or a life. Susan was convinced that only happened to other people, until Tasha and a life in the mountains taught her otherwise."--Page 4 of cover

      Go Find: My Journey to Find the Lost--And Myself