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Jon Krakauer - Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Mount Everest Diaster

Jon Krakauer - Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Mount Everest Diaster
 

Product Description

 
Into Thin Air is the definitive, personal account of the deadliest season in the history of Everest by the acclaimed journalist and author of Eiger Dreams and Into the Wild. On assignment for Outside magazine, Krakauer, an accomplished climber, went to the Himalayas to report on the growing commercialization of the planet's highest mountain. Everest has always been a dangerous mountain. From the first British expeditions in the 1920s until 1996, one climber has died for ever 4 who have attained the summit. This shocking death toll has not put a damper on the burgeoning business of guided ascents, however, in which amateur alpinists with alarmingly disparate skills are ushered up the mountain for a $65,000 fee. To ascend into the thin, frigid air above 26,000 feet - the cruising altitude of a commercial jetliner - is an inherently irrational act. The environment is unimaginably harsh, the margin for error miniscule. Krakauer examines what it is about Everest that has compelled so
 

Review Summary

Average Rating: 4.5
 
Based on 64 reviews
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Product Reviews Read All Reviews »

Into Thin Air: Gripping Account of Ascending Mount Everest

Date of Review:  Nov 9, 2001
The Bottom Line: Into Thin Air is an well- written account of human endurance and tragedy that most everyone will enjoy.
Review: Have you ever felt the urge to accomplish some feat of physical endurance?

Maybe you have considered skydiving? Or perhaps the thought of bungi ?jumping has crossed your mind from time to time?

Author Jon Krakauer had an...
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  5.0

by: Bryan_Carey
Recommended to buy: Yes

Pros
Vivid, suspenseful writing
Cons
There's nothing bad about this book.
 

Tragedy At The Top- Jon Krakauer's Into Thin Air

Date of Review:  Dec 7, 2000
The Bottom Line: Krakauer is an incredibly talented writer.
Review: Because it's there.

-George Mallory, in response to "an irritating newspaperman who demanded to know why he wanted to climb Everest."

This was also the answer given by a middle-aged and pot-bellied Captain Kirk, as a pointy-eared...
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  5.0

by: prfstars
Recommended to buy: Yes

Pros
Excellent writing, gripping story
Cons
Not even one.
 

How much are you willing to pay to climb Everest?

Date of Review:  Aug 27, 2000
Review: The Wall Street Journal ranks Into Thin Air ?among the greatest adventure books of all time.? And after reading this book I can understand why. It is a story of such bone-chilling horror and genuine nightmare than I had to ask myself a question, ?If...
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  5.0

by: AlexG
Recommended to buy: Yes

Pros
One of the best adventure books of all...
Cons
None
 
 

Video Reviews from Expo TV

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03:07
A interesting read
4/5 stars
a good book that is good good Pros: realistic account, not to detail oriented Cons: none
04:30
Into Thin Air by Jon Krakauer
5/5 stars
Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Mt. Everest Disaster. ISBN 0385492081. An account of the climbing season of 1996 as told by one of its participatns, Jon Krakauer. Interesting from many angles. Informative and spell-binding.Other, Books
01:28
Into Thin Air: Jon Krakauer
5/5 stars
Very exciting, interesting story of the accent on mount everest.Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Mt. Everest Disaster, Travel Guides, Travel
01:40
Into Thin Air Audiobook Review
5/5 stars
Fantastic story - author reading makes it even better.Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Mt. Everest Disaster, Travel Guides, Travel


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Product Details and Features

Key Information

Authors Jon Krakauer
Narrator Jon Krakauer
Fiction Genre Unknown
Fiction Subgenre Unknown
Awards 1998 Pulitzer Prize

Professional Reviews

  Time: [Krakauer's] fascinating and troubling account of the climb, is no chronicle of triumph. He was in ragged physical shape. A wracking cough had torn loose chest cartilage; his body had burned away 20 lbs. of muscle mass; he was running out of bottled oxygen. But the deadliest element of his situation was one he barely noticed; innocent-looking clouds rising from valleys to the south. . . . Krakauer, a thoughtful man and a fine writer (his Into the Wild, a report of a wilderness death in Alaska, was one of the best nonfiction books of 1996), says the ratio of misery to pleasure on Everest was greater than on any other mountain he has climbed. He draws no ringing conclusions from the disaster, although he thinks that banning bottled oxygen might keep weaker climbers off the mountain.
Annotation copyright H.W. Wilson Company.

Book Editions

  Format: Digital
Publisher: Bantam Doubleday Dell Audio
ISBN: 9780553754117
 
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