Favorite Read?
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Also check out Downward Bound by Warren Harding |
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i guess i havent read many or any novels about climbing but i enjoy historical books like -Yankee Rock and Ice, by Guy Waterman -A History of Free Climbing in North America, by Pat Ament Watermans book is much more readable where as Aments is basicly like 100+ years of climbing magazine hot flashes[...]quote> |
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The Ascent of Rum Doodle |
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Everest: The West Ridge |
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I just read "Calculated Risk" by Dougal Haston. He finished it the week before he died. It's good read. Had he lived I think he would gone on to a very good writer. |
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Eiger Dreams by John Crachouer awesome book of short stories. All of which are true and interesting. They all involve mountaineering but are not nececarily about it, they tend to be about the characters that climb. |
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I just read Lost Horizon by James Hilton. It's only marginally climbing-related, but I think anyone with an interest in mountains could appreciate it. |
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Hands down . . . Conquistadors of the Useless - by Lionel Terray. This guy was the real deal. Learn all about him, Gaston, Maurice, Lachenal, and other Chamonix guides. Follow a remarkable climbing career path leading up to the world's first 8,000 m summit. The stories in this book are something else . . . try climbing during WW II with a rifle. Close seconds: No Picnic on Mt. Kenya - Felice Benuzzi Gorilla Monsoon - John Long |
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I'm reading Fall of the Phantom Lord, which is about Dan Osman. It is worth a read. |
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A pretty fun book is Eiger Dreams, By John Krakaur. It is about ten short stories of all kind of clibing succeses and failures as well as a couple funny tails. |
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Favorites on the 20 feet or so of shelf space devoted to mountaineering books in our house: |
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What's so great about "Conquistadors of the Useless" is how understated it is. He's so humble about these absolute epic and historical climbs. It reads like for him it's just another day at the office. |
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Allen, excellent observation about Conquistadors. Most of the book seems to be written as if he were on the way to the store to purchase a gallon of milk. Just another day. Meanwhile they're suffering through some of the most brutal unplanned bivies imaginable, on some first ascent. |
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Holidays in Hell, P.J. O'Rork |
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Any post by the Hankster. |
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-'The Rock Warriors Way' by Arno Ilgner, highly recommended |
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I don't know if it's still in print or available, but Woodrow Wilson Sayer's "Four Against Everest" is an excellent read. Sometime before the 1963 American Everest Expedition, a Tufts University professor (Sayer) joined up with 3 friends and got permission to attempt a minor Nepalese peak. They ditched their sirdar and sherpas, crossed the border into Tibet, started up the north side of Everest and damn near made it before a long, long fall on steep snow put an end to their attempt. |
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Alice in Wonderland |





