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Reinhold Messner, Free Spirit: A Climber's Life

Reinhold Messner, Free Spirit: A Climber's Life

List Price: $19.95
Your Price: $13.57
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A rather dry account of one of the world's best mountaineers
Review: Free Spirit could have, potentially, been a incredible account of a brilliant mountaineering career. Instead, during the course of the book, one can picture Messner sitting down 20 years later in an attempt to remember exactly how he felt during his numerous expeditions and bold first ascents.

Although the book starts out well enough with fond memories of his childhood in the Dolomites, it quickly degrades into a fact-fest of unemotional paragraphs that will disappoint. How anyone can describe their first ascent of Everest without oxygen, or the death of a brother in so few words is amazing; if not degrading.

Your climbing collection will not miss this volume.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A rather dry account of one of the world's best mountaineers
Review: Free Spirit could have, potentially, been a incredible account of a brilliant mountaineering career. Instead, during the course of the book, one can picture Messner sitting down 20 years later in an attempt to remember exactly how he felt during his numerous expeditions and bold first ascents.

Although the book starts out well enough with fond memories of his childhood in the Dolomites, it quickly degrades into a fact-fest of unemotional paragraphs that will disappoint. How anyone can describe their first ascent of Everest without oxygen, or the death of a brother in so few words is amazing; if not degrading.

Your climbing collection will not miss this volume.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Disappointing
Review: Hard to believe that one could write such a dry account of the amazing climbing life of one of the world's most ambitious climbers. Full of facts, and probably very accurate, it fails to capture much "magic".

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An Extraordinary Story About An Obsessed Mountaneer
Review: It spans all the climbs of Reinhold Messner from his younger days in Alps to his fabulous Himalayan conquests. The book also has beautiful photographs of the great peaks of the world. The book is such that after the first few chapters you can skip back and forth to any climbs of your interest. His later climbs offer more gripping adventures; especially his climb to "Nanga Parbat" and his solo ascent of "Mt. Everest" without oxygen. A must for any person with a sense of adventure. -SAUMIL GANDH

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Reads like a rapid overview
Review: Messner's account of the early years of a remarkable climbing career skips over each individual ascent so quickly that the reader loses interest. While his writing in itself is not unskilled, the rapid descriptions make the book read like a laundry list. Also, while his puritanical philosophy of mountaineering must have its roots in this early period, he mentions its development only in passing. Despite some gorgeous photographs, this book does not approach the best of its kind.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Scintillating subject, but plodding narrative
Review: Reinhold Messner may be the Michael Jordan of mountaineering, but his writing style is flat footed. In his exploits, Messner has the raw material for some of the most compelling adventure literature of all time, but instead he produces little more than dull climbing notes (although accompanied by some interesting photography). There was very little illuminating introspection (even the account of his brother's death was pedestrian). I place this at the bottom of the heap of mountaineering literature

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The alpine icon
Review: The achievements of Reinhold Messner are legendary. Among them, he is the first man to have ascended Mount Everest without supplemental oxygen. He is also the first man to have climbed all fourteen 8000-meter peaks. Mr. Messner could rightfully be quite boastful and egotistic in his writing. Exactly the opposite is true. The book was panned by a number of reviewers for being "dry". This is precisely why I find the book so engaging and interesting. Mr. Messner narrates his achievements in a matter of fact manner leaving the reader to fill in the enormity of his spirit. Personally, I find the single-minded obsession of mountain climbers to be somewhat bizarre. Yet, I find reading about the tales of misery and death to be entertaining. I admire Mr. Messner for his unbridled enthusiam for mountain climbing and also for his restraint in narrating the tales.


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