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Chargement... Annapurna premier 8.000par Maurice Herzog
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Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. Exciting stuff. The last half of the book is BRUTAL reading. There are a few books I need to read that tell a different story of the motivations and behaviour of the climbing party but I just want to wait a while before getting into all that and marvel at this wonderful story. ( ) El tres de junio de 1950, Maurice Herzog y Louis Lachenal llegaban a la cima del Annapurna, convirtiéndose en los primeros seres humanos que coronaban una montaña de más de ochomil metros, escapando milagrosamente de la muerte. En los meses siguientes, mientras se recuperaba en el hospital de sus terribles amputaciones (que le dejarían sin los dedos de las manos y los pies), Herzog dictó Annapurna primer ochomil, una de las obras cumbre de la literatura expedicionaria de montaña. Gocemos de la fuente de inspiración más rica que podamos imaginar: las huellas de estos aventureros que nos dejaron una historia real de valor y camaradería. De exploración y pasión por la aventura. This is a terrifying book. Part of that is knowing how dangerous Annapurna is and how many climbers have died there. To the 1950 expedition, it was just another Himalayan peak, not obviously different from others. The most terrifying part of the book was the pervasive bad decision-making and poor teamwork. Almost everything was done with macho heroics and dictatorial leadership. It is normal for Himalayan mountaineering to be done at the very edge of the ability of the most capable climbers, but it isn't normal to so misjudge a hike between camps that you run out of food and crawl the last hundred yards calling for help. This is the kind of mountaineering that Paul Petzoldt's reforms targeted. In The New Wilderness Handbook, he talks about plans for time, energy, and climate. Herzog's expedition failed to plan for each of those. Go ahead and read this to get the testosterone-soaked version of mountaineering. Then read "The Ascent of Nanda Devi" (Tilman, 1936) and "Annapurna: A Woman's Place" (Blum, 1978) to get different approaches. Of course, also read "The Ascent of Rum Doodle" (Bowman, 1956). Was Bowman thinking of Herzog's book when someone identifies some local flora as "Nostalgia, Melancholia, and old-fashioned Manspride"? Finally, some maps would have helped, a lot. There is doing a great thing and there is writing a great account of that achievement. The author accomplished the first but not the second. Case in point: You are near the summit of Annapurna when you stop to scratch your ass or light a cigarette. That necessitates removing a glove which blows irretrievably away. So you are going to lose some fingers or even a whole hand. How about at least a little self-recrimination about not attaching your gloves with a piece of yarn the way your mother used to do? Not doing so makes for a stultifying story indeed. Nowadays you fly to New Delhi, then on to Kolkata or Mumbai and from there by helicopter to base camp. Back in Herzog's day you took six weeks to drive by motor caravan through congested traffic. If that logistical nightmare interests you, read this book. aucune critique | ajouter une critique
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One of Sports Illustrated's Top 100 Sports Books of All Time: A gripping firsthand account of one of the most daring climbing expeditions in history. #1 New York Times Bestseller Annapurna I is the name given to the 8,100-meter mountain that ranks among the most forbidding in the Himalayan chain. Dangerous not just for its extreme height but for a long and treacherous approach, its summit proved unreachable until 1950, when a group of French mountaineers made a mad dash for its peak. They became the first men to accomplish the feat, doing so without oxygen tanks or any of the modern equipment that contemporary climbers use. The adventure nearly cost them their lives. Maurice Herzog dictated this firsthand account of the remarkable trek from a hospital bed as he recovered from injuries sustained during the climb. An instant bestseller, it remains one of the most famous mountaineering books of all time, and an enduring testament to the power of the human spirit. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)796.522095496The arts Recreational and performing arts Athletic and outdoor sports and games Outdoor leisure Exploring geological features Mountains, hills and rocks History, geographic treatment, biography Nepal, HimalayasClassification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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