I had the pleasure of meeting Don Sheldon. The Elmendorf Aeroclub held monthly "safety" meetings, and often there would be speakers come to visit to talk aviation. He was one of them, either in late 1972 or early 1973. I remember him as a tall, very quiet man. I knew of his exploits in advance, because he had very much become an Alaska legend by then, but he was so unassuming in his demeanor that you'd never guess that he was a pilot of such skill and experience--by no means any kind of braggart.
I bought the book,
Wager With The Wind, soon after it was first published in 1982, when I saw it at a bookstore. I remember being surprised when I read in the introduction that Sheldon had died only a couple years after I met him, of cancer in January 1975. For someone who risked his life almost daily to do what he did routinely to die of that awful disease at such a young age (only 53) was such a loss to Alaska, and to aviation. I can recommend the book to anyone who hasn't read it. Non-aviation types might be put off a little by the aviation-speak that the author uses, but pilots will enjoy it immensely--excellent read.
Here's the website for Sheldon Air Service:
http://www.sheldonairservice.com/About- ... on-Sheldon Cary