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Re: Good Books

PostPosted: Thu Sep 22, 2005 11:07 pm
by Misha
I am reading Galen Rowell's "Many people come looking, looking...". So far, excellent! Chouinard's "Climing Ice" was good too.

Re: Good Books

PostPosted: Thu Sep 22, 2005 11:23 pm
by dadndave
My coffee table book is "Voices from the summit" a collection of essays celebrating 25 years of the Banff Mountain Festival. Contributions from Ed Hillarry. Anderl Heckmair, Chris Bonnington, Yvon Chouinard, Catherine Destivelle among others. Great reading. Love the front cover too, it's a picture of 5 climbers atop the abruzzi ridge on K2 seemingly totally absorbed in their immediate surroundings (knee deep snow) and oblivious to the awful pyramid ahead.

Recommended reading

Re: Good Books

PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 6:11 pm
by Nelson
The short list for this year's Boardman Tasker prize for mountaineering literature have been announced:

Andy Cave, Learning to Breathe
Mick Fowler, On Thin Ice
Jim Perrin, The Villain: the Life of Don Whillans
Richard Sale, Broad Peak
Anne Sauvy, Mountain Rescue Chamonix - Mont Blanc

<a href="http://www.boardmantasker.com/site/shortlist2005.htm">Details</a>

Re: Good Books

PostPosted: Sat Oct 01, 2005 7:10 pm
by ksolem
Reading both "Into This Air" and "The Climb," one comes to realise just how different two people's perceptions can be of the same events. Krakauer and Boukreev were on the same mountain at the same time and came away with conflicting stories. This seems to happen on a lot of expiditions.

Tasker and Boardman each wrote an account of their ground breaking ascent of Changabang, and reading them both is great fun. One is called "The Shining Mountain." Don't recall the other...

Re: Good Books

PostPosted: Mon Oct 03, 2005 3:23 am
by marauders
Clint Willis has a few books titled "Epic", "High", and "Climb." Each compiles excerpts from roughly 15 books. “Epic” focuses on great mountaineering literature on high altitude summits. “High” focuses on K2 and Everest. “Climb” focuses on adventures on rock, snow, and ice, but not necessarily summits. Each can be found on Amazon.com.

I would highly recommend them. Most of the stories are very intense. Each excerpt is considered by Clint Willis to be the best in mountain literature. The stories give you good background then get right to the action. Many of the books others have listed in this thread are found in these compilations.

Re: Good Books

PostPosted: Mon Oct 03, 2005 8:54 am
by Nugs
I liked reading "Touch The Top Of The World, a blind man's journey to climb farther than the eye can see" by Eric Weihenmayer. This book is as much about his life before climbing(which is still interseting) as it is about his big climbs though.

Re: Good Books

PostPosted: Mon Oct 03, 2005 4:02 pm
by ksolem
I've got to disagree in a friendly fashion with marauder's take on the Clint Willis books, at least the third one. "Climb" drove me crazy. The stories are cut down so severely that they seem out of context. For example Wickwire's account of his partners death in a crevasse is just plain incomplete without the follow up, especially the park rangers statements describing how diificult it was for their team to recover the man. And the tragic first story by David Roberts frustrated me, all the kid had to do was tie in short a couple times to solve the problem.

There are some great anthologies out there. "Tales From the Steep" by John Long comes to mind but I don't think Willis extreme excerpts does anyone any favors. Just my opinion.

Re: Good Books

PostPosted: Thu Dec 01, 2005 12:12 am
by Nugs
I'm reading Dharma bums by Kerouac. Not really about mountain climbing but climbing is included and the rest is still interesting.

Re: Good Books

PostPosted: Thu Dec 01, 2005 12:30 am
by Diggler
Am finishing up 'No Picnic on Mt. Kenya' (as much a pun on their running out of food with days to go to return as the indication of the difficulty of the climb!) by Felice Benuzzi, an Italian PoW at a British camp near the base of Mt. Kenya.

He & 2 others schemed & executed an escape (& return) from camp to attempt a climb of <a href="http://www.summitpost.org/mountains/photo_link.pl/p/photo_id__123503__object_id__80__type__mountain__mountain_id__80__route_id____user_id____order_by____limit__">Batian,</a> the true summit of Mt. Kenya. Due to various factors, they had to settle for subpeak Pt. Lenana.

The book, although not written in Benuzzi's native tongue, is an excellent read, & really does a good job of portraying the passion Benuzzi had for the mountains, & just living. HIs presentation really lets the reader share in his joy, hunger, disappointment, & revelry. His sincerity & humility are a welcome change from some of the overhyped, insincere drivel that I've read elsewhere. Highly recommended!

Re: Good Books

PostPosted: Thu Dec 01, 2005 4:07 am
by TinyTim
My boss recently caught me reading a climbing book, and to my suprise he said he was very interested in "those" types of books and asked if he could borrow one. Joe Simpson's "The Beckoning Silence" kept me so interested that I went to the book store on my lunch break and bought a new copy just for a loaner. It keeps you on the edge of your chair as soon as you start reading, he also has a funny/ sometimes morbid look on things.

Re: Good Books

PostPosted: Thu Dec 01, 2005 4:11 am
by johngenx
I know Twight's "Extreme Alpinism" is supposed to be a technical book, but I love it for the accounts of things gone right/wrong/sideways.

Re: Good Books

PostPosted: Thu Dec 01, 2005 2:56 pm
by Cy Kaicener
Here are 100 more good mountaineering books <a href=http://www.ronwatters.com/BkChess.htm>http://www.ronwatters.com/BkChess.htm</a>

Re: Good Books

PostPosted: Thu Dec 01, 2005 5:11 pm
by fdoctor
Here's three utter, utter classics which just have to be posessed:
1. The Seven Mountain Travel Books, in a single volume by H W Tilman
2. The Six Mountain Travel Books, in a single volume by Eric Shipton

And, something completely different:
3. Cold Climbs: The Great Snow & Ice Climbs Of The British Isles, compiled by Ken Wilson et al.
This is not a climbing guide book, its coffee table size and entirely with b&w photographs and "stories" written by some very famous climbers for each route. A classic chapter is The Tower Ridge Rulebook (Ben Nevis)Check it out

Re: Good Books

PostPosted: Mon Dec 05, 2005 9:19 pm
by Buz Groshong
I read Boukreev's book after Krakauer's and although I enjoyed the first part of "Climb," I thought the last half of it was just a pissing contest, complaining primarily about Krakauer. I also enjoyed the first half of Krakauer's "Eiger Dreams," but found the second half of it mostly ego boosting drivel. I thoroughly enjoyed Whymper's "Scrambles Amongst the Alps." I enjoyed "Desert Solitaire," but have met some folks who didn't enjoy it, but who did like Abbey's "The Monkey Wrench Gang," which I also enjoyed.

Re: Good Books

PostPosted: Tue Dec 06, 2005 6:14 pm
by Finarphin
Annapurna, Maurice Herzog. Can't be beat.

The Crystal Horizon, Reinhold Messner. He fell into a crevasse and lived to tell the tale.

The Romance of Mountaineering, by R.L.G. Irving is a good survey, even though by now it's a bit old.

I also personally liked a book by Elizabeth Knowlton about one of the German expeditions to Nanga Parbat; I forget the title. It was well written.