The Climb: Tragic Ambitions on Everest

The Climb: Tragic Ambitions on Everest

by Anatoli Boukreev (Author), G . Weston Dewalt (Author), G . Weston De Walt (Author)

Synopsis

The Climb is a true, gripping, and thought-provoking account of the worst disaster in the history of Mount Everest. On May 10, 1996, two commercial expeditions headed by experienced leaders attempted to climb the highest mountain in the world, but things went terribly wrong. Crowded conditions on the mountain, miscommunications, unexplainable delays, poor leadership, bad decisions, and a blinding storm conspired to kill. Twenty-three men and women, disoriented and out of oxygen, struggled to find their way down the southern side of the mountain. In the dark, battered by snow driven by hurricane-force winds, some of the climbers became hopelessly lost and resigned themselves to death. Anatoli Boukreev, the head climbing guide for the West Seattle-based Mountain Madness expedition, refused to give up hope. Solo, climbing blind in the maw of a storm that continually threatened his life, Boukreev brought climbers back from the edge of certain death. Here for the first time, Anatoli Boukreev speaks in his own voice about what happened on that desperate day on Mount Everest. His dramatic first-person account is woven into the sensitive, probing inquiry conducted by investigative writer and filmmaker G. Weston DeWalt, whose extensive interviews with expedition members and survivors and with professional mountaineers provide a unique and critical perspective on the tragedy. The Climb is an odjective account of misadventure and a sobering cautionary tale of hubris in the face of unforgiving nature.

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More Information

Format: Mass Market Paperback
Pages: 297
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Saint Martin's Press Inc.
Published: 27 Nov 1998

ISBN 10: 0312965338
ISBN 13: 9780312965334

Media Reviews
Raw but powerful...[Boukreev] took action. He chose danger, and he saved lives. -- The New York Times Book Review One of the most amazing rescues in mountaineering history, performed single-handedly a few hours after climbing Everest without oxygen by a man some describe as the Tiger Woods of Himalayan climbing. -- Wall Street Journal [ The Climb ] has a ring of authenticity that challenges the slickly written Into Thin Air... Compelling -- Minneapolis Star Tribune
Author Bio
Anatoli Boukreev was one of the world's foremost high-altitude mountaineers, arguably the finest of his generation. He had summited eleven of the world's 8,000 meter peaks without the use of supplementary oxygen, some of them, including Mount Everest, multiple times. In all, he attempted twenty-one times he was successful. Born in Russia where he received the Master of Sports with Honors, Boukreev had made his home in Kazakhstan where in 1998 the President of that Republic awarded him posthumously the Erligi Ushin Medal for his contributions to high-altitude mountaineering and for his personal courage. G. Weston Dewalt is a writer and investigative filmmaker who specializes in human rights issues, the confluence of humankind and the environment, and biography. His film Genbaku shi: Killed by the Atomic Bomb compelled the U.S. Department of Defense to acknowledge that American POWs had been killed during the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. He divides his time between Santa Fe, New Mexico, and London.