Eye opening!
I’ve been fascinated with people who have the desire to have their bodies slowly die at high altitudes, having never had the desire myself 🤣. It interests me to hear accounts of the physical, technical and mental trials people undergo, among other things.
But I never knew nor suspected that there has been (still is?) such a lawlessness in the mountains. Is it mountain madness?
I’ve watched many documentaries, including the one about Lhakpa Sherpa, and I wasn’t wholly convinced about her “humble” personality. This book made me even less so, although the book is not about her.
People being left to die by “guides” and Sherpas? (Sorry, I know Sherpa is a surname that has become synonymous with a profession). People being sabotaged. Theft, tents cut loose and pitched off the mountain or hidden, leaving climbers in peril. Wow! I had no idea!
Now that I reflect on this audiobook, I accept that it is (mostly) one man’s experience and perception of the events, and terrifying ones at times. (Your camping partner sleeping with a knife so that she can slice her way out of her tent if “someone” sets fire to it, is a terror I don’t want to imagine! That said, when I go camping, in England, during the nice seasons, on a flat field, I too sleep next to a fold away sharp knife (a birthday present from my brother in law 🤣) that I call my “fire escape” opened and ready, just in case we need to get out quickly. So I can’t imagine what that feels like when you seem genuinely under threat of life from others! It’s not like you can just pack your shizzle up quick into the boot of the car and drive home. You’re half way up a mountain ffs!)
Anyway, I get all excited and waffle on.
So the author, Michael Kodas, mentions near the end of the book that the commercialism of Mount Everest, the inexperienced climbers causing bottlenecks, the tea stalls, solar panels, laptops, satellite phones, prostitution, authors, journalists and film crews etc are contributing to the demise of, in my words, the spirit of mountain climbing. But perhaps he should have openly included himself in with that. He went, in order to write a book about the people he was climbing with, and that’s what he did. So he is one of those contributing factors, and I’d have just liked to hear him say that.