Home :: Books :: Audio CDs  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs

Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Into Thin Air

Into Thin Air

List Price: $29.95
Your Price: $20.37
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 .. 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 .. 126 >>

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Adventure or Hubris?
Review: Krakauer does a thourough and professional job of reporting with ample historic and technical background. I really have no argument with the structure or workmanship of the book. I think that I am dissapointed by the relentlessly dark narrative that concludes with a single ghastly anecdote and not a shred of hope or redemption.

"Into Thin Air" chronicles the lives and senseless deaths of people caught up in their own close-knit world of acheivement for acheivement's sake. The Everest expeditions described in this book were populated largely by wealthy people purchasing an accomplishment for a handsome fee. Their self-serving mission ends in disaster and death.

Krakauer trys, admirably, to take his share of the blame without speaking ill of the dead. At best he draws the reader into his own regrets and depression and concludes that the cimb was senseless and tragic. There is little nobility, redemption, or contribution to society in these pages; just a journal of broken dreams and needless suffering that becomes self-agrandising and distasteful. In my opinion time ill spent.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A fascinating story of the human spirit
Review: This book is Jon Krakauer's first hand account of his 1996 climb up Mt. Everest with a climbing group led by the renowned Rob Hall. This season is known as the deadliest season in the history of Everest.

I like how this book is written because Krakauer doesn't set out to make anyone, not even himself, look like some sort of hero in this incident. It seems as if he tells the story as it was according to his memory, and the heroes just naturally shine through.

As I read this book, I encountered many emotions. There were points where I felt joy for great accomplishments and sadness for losses. There were people who I just looked upon with great disdain. I also feel for Jon Krakauer who seems to spend his life with many regrets over that tremendous night of loss.

Overall, I found this book to be a very good read.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Into Thin Air
Review: Jon Krakauer does a great job describing the incident and not leaving out and details. As you read it, it almost seems as if you're on the mountain along with the characters. This book is very vivid and compelling, and I recommend it to anyone wanting to read a good action book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Biased View of a Cocky Author
Review: I felt that the book is very well written, and important to life and all people shole read this book. It is skillfuly written. The only thing that held it back was the biased oppion of the author. He wrote the book as if he was the better than anyperson climbing that year. He was a real cocky writter and that made the book only a little less injoyable.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wow, Wow, Wow- And it's A True Story
Review: Okay, this book starts a little slow (as in the very, very beginning, a few pages), but it picks up pace so quickly that the book is finished within hours. For me, personally, to finish a book within hours is a miracle, simply because I lose interest in anything rather quickly, but not with this book. The story is told in a way that the reader is allowed to identify with the characters (there are a lot of them to learn)in a way that make you want to know what happened to them. You know there's going to be a disaster, but it is all of the events leading up to, during, and following it that are interesting. There is so much suspense that you can't help but continue, at least to the next chapter (or so you tell youself) until the book is done. It honestly surprised me how good this book was. After reading it, if you happen upon anyone else who read it, you can talk for hours about it; the mountain; and anything relating (literally, hours -- this one person I was talking to even got around to the IMAX film about it -- these conversations can stray, so beware). One person I know even went to the mountain for 6 months just to be there after reading the novel. It's inspiring.

If you need a good book to read, that's thoroughly interesting, fast paced, and has pictures (yes! there are pictures too!), then this is the book for you. Then knowing it all actually happened adds to it even more.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A stunning, tragic read
Review: Call it curiosity, call it an absorbing adventure, or blame it on the fact that I was sick in bed and couldn't really do anything but read. Or just call it a disturbing report of the last days of some fascinating people, a report that is written so tightly that you can't put it down because it won't let you. This is what Jon Krakauer's "Into Thin Air" was for me.

It is so rare that a piece of fact-based or even historical narrative works so well as a book. I credit the author's sensitive ears and eyes, which allowed him to recreate the speech and look of a cast of disparate characters in what becomes one of the saddest accounts of hubris and tragic ill-fatedness I have ever read.

What is most impressive to me about this book, though, is the delicate balance Krakauer is able to strike between his own guilt at having survived to tell the story (something Holocaust historians refer to as "survivor guilt") and his own need to tell it. There is a fair amount of perhaps justified self-flagellation, but at no point does it overwhelm the narrative. Otherwise put, Krakauer treats the tragedy with enough reverence not to bury it under the story of his own guilt; "Into Thin Air" may bill itself as "A Personal Account of the Mt. Everest Disaster," but Krakauer makes certain that it is not about him, for it is about those who were lost and those who loved them. This is driven home powerfully in the epilogue, during which the author presents some quite harsh criticism leveled against him by victims' families, and he does so without responding, without succumbing to the temptation to get the last word in despite his being in a prime position to do so.

"Into Thin Air," like all great books, tells us about much more than the episode that is its most local concern. The culprit in this story--and this is made clear on so many levels--is money. Everest is now a commercial venture, the book makes clear, and mountaineering companies feeling the financial pinch are forced to "summit" climbers who are perhaps not ready or worthy of summiting, just to keep good word of mouth going, just to keep new clients coming, just to stay in business.

Krakauer gives us an alternative to this, though, in his well-researched and thoughtfully presented historical snippets. There was a time, we learn, when those who knew Everest best knew it as an adventure, and not as an economic enterprise. When the curiosity of the explorers becomes the claim-staking of the colonizers--when venture capital must be protected--questions that should arise are beaten back. Everest was far too high a peak to be carelessly embroiled in bottom lines, and, in this book as in life, too much attention to the bottom line means suffering at a much higher cost. Krakauer is careful not to pound this point home, but he makes it felt.

All of this aside, though, "Into Thin Air" is quite simply a well-written, brilliantly told, and carefully respectful rendering of a sad, sad chapter in the lives of some beautiful and brave human beings.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: simply superb
Review: I rarely am moved enough to write any review. The product must be beyond excellence to warrant the time. "Into Thin Air" is such a product. This is a riveting detailed transcript of the most extraordinary of nightmares played out on the worlds highest stage, Mt Everest.
The author leaves you little time for rest as this harrowing factual tale unfolds.
Simply superb!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Couldn't put it down!
Review: Absolutely excellent! Ten minutes into this book I found myself unable to put it down. John's account of his trek up Everest is so intense and descriptive you're bones will hurt at times. A must read for the adrenaline junky. Be warned though - this is an addictive story. After reading this book you'll rent the IMAX video, watch the specials on Discovery and perhaps develop an irrational desire to visit, maybe even summit, Everest. You've been warned!!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Surprisingly good read
Review: For years, I'd heard a lot of good things about "Into Thin Air." However, I'm not a climber, and I thought I'd seen and heard enough about the Everest disaster. I finally picked up Krakauer's book, and I'm glad I did.

For starters, the book is fast paced (for the most part) and is written for both climbers and non-climbers alike. Krakauer takes responsibility for some of the tragedies of Everest in the book, but you can also understand how some of the poor exercises in judegement were exacerbated by the lack of oxygen above the so-called "death zone." Krakauer does a fair job of just telling the straight facts, but of course you know that it's just one point of view on the story. For instance, Krakauer was not a fan of Anatoli Boukreev, a fellow climber from Russia who was serving as one of the guides. Of course, there are two sides to every issue, but it does make you question the judgement of others, not just Krakauer's.

It was also interesting to learn more about the Sherpas, the trip to the mountain and just some interesting tidbits I never really thought about. For instance, there's a field of empty oxygen bottles up near Camp Four. I never really thought about it, but all those people do produce trash, and if they don't remove it, it just stays. Luckily, there is an effort to clean the mountain. I had also been interested in perhaps going to Base Camp if I ever had the chance, but after reading about the camp where you have to stay before you reach Base Camp, I'm having to reconsider.

This wa just a good book to read from just a sheer adventure point of view. I strongly recommend this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Unforgetable
Review: I write this review from a perspective of several years so I'll be short on specifics and long on impressions. I will never go mountain climbing; the mere thought of it makes me quesy. However, after reading this book, I went out and got the next two books that came out on the subject of this infamous incident. Although the other two books were enjoyable, I realized that Krakauer's account IS the definitive story on the subject. Haunting is the first adjective that comes to mind in describing his account. His insights to the whole Everest experience was intriguing. I will always remember his well-phrased images of the piles of empty oxygen canisters (not to mention the accumulations of human waste) in this pristine location. The reader gets all the essential background of what it is like to venture into this mystical locale including all the risks and affects of the altitude. Krakauer makes you understand what it is like to have been there. The various characters in the groups that climbed together were well developed and we find ourselves developing our own opinions of them. The drama of the storm and the deaths at high altitude is compelling as is the rescue and the strange case of Beck Weathers. What is hard to understand is that the author did it all in such a short book. This book is an experience and one that you wouldn't want to miss.


<< 1 .. 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 .. 126 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates