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Into Thin Air : A Personal Account of the Mt. Everest Disaster

Into Thin Air : A Personal Account of the Mt. Everest Disaster

List Price: $13.95
Your Price: $10.46
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great book
Review: Into Thin Air is a great book. If you like hiking you will definately like this book. It is very suspenceful. Once you start you can't stop. This book is filled with tradegy and triumph. Hikers: this book is definately for you.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A totally engrossing read which left me clutching my chair
Review: Krakauer has captured the most intimate experience that human beings can have as they approach and confront their own mortality. He has stripped the human condition of its pretense and facade and revealed the existential truth that how we choose to meet death reflects the quality of our journey to that end and is the final measure of our existence.

Jack Baldwin LeClair

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A life-changing book
Review: This is one of the few books of the many that you will read in your life that you will not forget. It is, of course, one man's view of what happened which has caused some controversy but being invited to share this man's private experience is what makes this book what it is. I thank Krakauer for sharing this with us. I truly felt that I was there on Everest when this tragedy happened.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Get comfortable 'cause you wont want to put it down!
Review: At least I coudn't. Great read. Krakauer is easy to read and you felt like you were there with him the whole way. I have so much respect for what these people go through for their sport. As for the 'Guided Tour' debate on these mountains, it makes an interesting conversation starter.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Top of the Mountain
Review: I bought this book because there was nothing but pulp fiction on the market bookrack and I desperately needed something to read on vacation. I already knew the story, having seen it on one of the television newsmagazines. But the cover said it was great---"one of the great adventure books of all time." Yeah, sure. All I need is a book to send me off to dreamland, right? Wrong. It IS one of the greatest adventure books of all time. I couldn't put it down. I stayed up two hours after my wife fell asleep and woke up before dawn and continued reading it by the dim glow of a penlight. Krakauer is a magnificent writer and storyteller, and what a story he has to tell. Blending mini-biographies of the fascinating people who choose to ascend Mt. Everest with the drama of their doomed encounter with the forces of nature--all set against Everest's exotic locale--Krakauer draws us up onto the mountain with him, giving us a primer in the lore and politics of alpine climbing as well as a a gripping recount of death's relentless and sometimes capricious assault on mortality. It will take your breath away.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: wish I hadn't waited...
Review: Who knows why I waited to read this book...perhaps a kind of perverse obstinacy that precludes rushing to read 'what everyone is reading' and 'what everyone is talking about.' My loss. Once I picked it up, I couldn't put it down--knowing from the outset who would die and who would live did little to diminish the tension and emotion of the roller-coaster ride. Next time, I may be quicker to trust 'group think' on book selection.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The book was borderline addictive.
Review: The book was written with obvious deep insite- Jon's mixture of emotion and technical writing made this book a real treat.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An entertaining yet frightening account of man vs. mountain
Review: About halfway through INTO THE WILD, it's hard to tell whether this book is meant to be cathartic or merely one man's account of the tragedy on Everest in 1996.

The detail that Krakauer uses to describe the mundane and ordinary to a climber, like how to fasten crampons onto boots, gives the average reader a much closer perspective on climbing. The depth that he uses to detail the wind and temperature felt at 26,000 feet turns this book from non-fiction to prose. By the end of the book, I didn't care what his purpose was....I was so wrapped up in the drama and details of climbing Everest in May of '96 that it was a shame to realize I'd reached the last page.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The story has lingered, haunting me.
Review: I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I don't know a thing about mountain climbing, but now I find myself haunted by the events I've read about. One thing I feel is sadness that some of the people involved feel compelled to point fingers and "blame" one another. How could you possibly judge someone's actions when they are freezing, oxygen depleted, and incoherent? It's hard enough to (emotionally) let go of these experiences. People do what they can in the circumstances. It's a sad thing to see these survivors bickering over who didn't do enough, who did more, etc... They should just be glad they've survived and not lay blame. The photo book "Mountain Without Mercy" with the photographs of David Breashears is also beautiful.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: It will take your breath away!
Review: I'm the 1st to admit I'm no literary expert, but ,I do know what interests me.And this book,I couldn't put down.I don't think you need to be into mountain climbing,to get hooked on this book.


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