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Loading... K2: Life and Death on the World's Most Dangerous Mountain (edition 2009)by Ed Viesturs, David Roberts
Work detailsK2: Life and Death on the World's Most Dangerous Mountain by Ed Viesturs
No where is mountaineering more dangerous than K2, where for every four climbers that have reached the summit, a person has died. Ed Viesturs' "K2: Life and Death on the World's Most Dangerous Mountain" details six of K2 expeditions-- with plenty of details about the highs and lows of each one. I'm fairly familiar with most of the stories he tells (having read books about three of the six expeditions he covers) but knowing the stories didn't really matter -- he has a great ability to tell stories, with enough to detail to make it interesting but not so much that it all bogs down. Very enjoyable and quick read for me. It is a good book but it jumps all over the place and is a bit hard to follow. Ed Viesturs is one of the 18 people ever (and the only American) to have climbed all fourteen eight thousanders. It's a very rare feat- no woman has achieved it as yet. Yet, he is surprisingly level headed and devoid of ego. He ascribes his success to hard work, common sense and lack of bravura. He doesn't put it that way and it's not that blunt but this is what can be read between the lines. This cannot be said about all climbers though, and it's is especially visible when climbing the world's most treacherous mountain- K2. Many lose their lives in 'getting to the top fever', by being ill prepared, overconfident or blindly ambitious. K2 is the world's second tallest mountain and four times as deadly as Everest. One in four climbers dies there. Viesturs almost lost his life there in 1992 when he and his partner Scott Fisher (he later lost his life on the infamous Everest climb described by Krakauer in Into Thin Air) were swept away by an avalanche, and it was Viesturs who managed to save them both. Viesturs explores the remarkable history of the mountain by examining eight different expeditions to the top, and of those who wanted to conquer it. Viesturs has a remarkably high opinion of Polish climbers, which I, being Polish, duly note. I really enjoyed the breadth of different stories that were included in this collection. It includes detailed accounts of expeditions across an entire century. It seems as though it is mostly about the defeats, but there are certainly plenty of people that make it to the summit in each of the tellings. More interesting in a way is the insight into Ed Viesturs' career and his climbing philosophy. He critiques each of the expeditions and supplies his own ideas about why each ended as it did. He tries to stay above gossip and bickering, while repeatedly saying that he thinks it is a bad thing to air the dirty laundry of an expedition in a book, but he seems to do just that. I think I'd like him, and I personally agree with his philosophy that getting to the top is no good if you don't get down.. safely. Plenty of adventure and a well told set of stories. no reviews | add a review
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Also loved the details in the 1986 incident. Good book overall. (