

Buy anything from 5,000+ international stores. One checkout price. No surprise fees. Join 2M+ shoppers on Desertcart.
Desertcart purchases this item on your behalf and handles shipping, customs, and support to Vietnam.
Featuring original interviews with mountain guides and climbers―including Jimmy Chin and Conrad Anker―this vivid and authoritative adventure history chronicles one of the least likely industries o Review: It will change your mind about Everest guiding. - We've all heard and read about Mt. Everest disasters, starting with Into Thin Air for most people. Krakauer was hard on the guides, and the guiding industry in general. This is not an uncommon perspective among "traditional" climbers, who prefer to climb without oxygen and support from Sherpas or other porters. It's not a fair perspective. The vast, vast majority of people who wish to challenge themselves on Everest--or any other high peak--need assistance in logistics, planning, and expertise on summit day. Guides provide that. Too many people who have never walked up a hill like to complain about people climbing Everest for their egos and to brag at cocktail parties. And the fact that local, Nepalese control is taking over the industry? We should celebrate this. This is a great book. Review: Garbage delivery service. - Excellent book. Delivered by Dragonfly.



| Best Sellers Rank | #115,116 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #49 in Climbing & Mountaineering #52 in History of Expeditions & Discoveries #222 in Biographies of Travelers & Explorers |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 35 Reviews |
J**R
It will change your mind about Everest guiding.
We've all heard and read about Mt. Everest disasters, starting with Into Thin Air for most people. Krakauer was hard on the guides, and the guiding industry in general. This is not an uncommon perspective among "traditional" climbers, who prefer to climb without oxygen and support from Sherpas or other porters. It's not a fair perspective. The vast, vast majority of people who wish to challenge themselves on Everest--or any other high peak--need assistance in logistics, planning, and expertise on summit day. Guides provide that. Too many people who have never walked up a hill like to complain about people climbing Everest for their egos and to brag at cocktail parties. And the fact that local, Nepalese control is taking over the industry? We should celebrate this. This is a great book.
D**N
Garbage delivery service.
Excellent book. Delivered by Dragonfly.
J**E
A deep look at the world’s highest business
I’m not a climber, and my knowledge of the climbing world—Everest or otherwise—is limited largely to the moments that have broken through to pop by culture. But Cockrell’s book kept me hooked, swirling together history, tragedy, anthropology, and humanity at the top of the world while charting the (so-far) brief but intense history of guiding on Everest. The book often tells the story behind the story for the moments that became global news—the horrible ice fall, the earthquake, the infamous “conga line” photo— while situating them inside the bigger narrative the really drives all Cockrell’s reporting: who deserves to run Everest? And just below it all, another question, far less easy to answer: how much death is acceptable for a business built on, to some degree, selling the act of conquering death?
D**K
A great read for the vicarious climber
Great history of the early days of Everest guiding. Well researched and written with some interesting evaluations and conclusions.
K**D
Behind the scenes on Everest.
Good info. A bit repetitive. I understand why, (for context and timing). Seems to be very well researched! I would recommend!
Trustpilot
2 days ago
1 month ago