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Auf den Gipfeln der Welt: Die Eiger-Nordwand und andere Träume

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Der Autor des Weltbestsellers »In eisige Höhen« berichtet in zwölf brillanten Reportagen von seinen gefährlichen Leidenschaften: dem Everest und dem K2, dem Montblanc und der berüchtigten Eiger-Nordwand, vom Canyoning in wilden Schluchten und von seiner erfolgreichen Solobesteigung des Devils Thumb in Alaska. Er erzählt von berühmten Bergsteigern, die für ihre Passion ihr Leben aufs Spiel setzen, und macht verständlich, worin die Faszination der Berge besteht. »Allesamt spannende und interessante Geschichten, oft mit ungewöhnlichen Perspektiven, Humor und jenem ironischen Unterton, der aus >Helden< wieder Menschen macht und damit das >Abenteuer< erst plausibel.« Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung

304 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1990

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About the author

Jon Krakauer

56 books16.5k followers
Jon Krakauer is an American writer and mountaineer, well-known for outdoor and mountain-climbing writing.

https://www.facebook.com/jonkrakauer

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,148 reviews
Profile Image for Will Byrnes.
1,372 reviews121k followers
June 2, 2022
Before the recognition he received for Into the Wild and Into Thin Air, Jon Krakauer was a serious outdoors type, writing about other serious outdoors types. In this collection of essays, Krakauer relates several stories of his personal adventures, one about a youthful, and maybe foolish venture to a particularly difficult climb in Alaska, another about his attempt at Eiger. And these are quite good. But I most enjoy Krakauer when he writes about the Damon-Runyon-esque characters who inhabit the world of extreme adventuring.

description
John Krakauer - image fr0m his Facebook pages

For example, in Gill, he writes of John Gill, the world’s foremost practitioner of “bouldering” (think fly on ceiling) as someone who might really levitate. Two drunken brothers manage to have a crack at a surprising number of major climbs despite their disinclination to organization and sobriety in The Burgess Boys. Chamonix is a town in France Krakauer calls the “death sport capital of the world.” The story features a bar in which large screens entertain the crowd with diverse scenes of death and near death. It is laugh-out-loud funny when Krakauer illuminates the sundry ethnic conflicts, with particular attention paid to the creative insults each enjoy using on the other. It called to mind Python-like Frenchmen launching diseased animals at their English foes while calling out “come back here so we can taunt you some more.”

While most of us are not likely to have a go at Eiger’s north face, work as bush pilots, try surviving hurricane force winds with temperatures so cold as to defy imagination while huddled in a torn tent or dubious ice cave at twenty-something thousand feet, it is a wonderful thing to have some crazy person who lives in that world to report to the rest of us what goes on there. Eiger Dreams is a fast, entertaining and informative read.

Review first posted in 2010
Profile Image for David Rubenstein.
866 reviews2,788 followers
March 16, 2015
This is a wonderful collection of essays about mountain climbing. I greatly enjoyed Krakauer's book, Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Mount Everest Disaster, and Eiger Dreams is just as good. Each chapter is an essay on some facet of mountain climbing. The first chapter is about climbing the Eiger. Other chapters are about climbing Mount Blanc and K2. Another chapter is about bouldering, and another is about the experiences of a bush pilot in Alaska, transporting mountain climbers to a glacier at the base of Mount McKinley. One chapter is about ice climbing, while another describes the experience of living in a tent for days on end, while a storm makes it impossible to get out.

A small stream of dry humor runs throughout the book. You have to have a sense of humor to engage in some of these dangerous, sometimes mind-numbing activities. One chapter describes how a team of doctors spend their summers on the slopes of Mt. McKinley. They study the effects of altitude sickness, and has saved numerous lives. All on their own dime. Krakauer asked one of the doctors "why they volunteered to spend their summers toiling in such a godforsaken place."
"Well," he explained as he stood shivering in a blizzard, reeling from nausea and a blinding headache while attempting to repair a broken radio antenna. "It's sort of like having fun, only different."


While describing the heavy human toll among climbers of K2, a troubling question gets asked: "Should a civilized society continue to condone, much less celebrate, an activity in which there appears to be a growing acceptance of death as a likely outcome?" During one summer, one out of five climbers who attempted the mountain did not come back alive.

When Krakauer told Coloradans that he intended to climb the Devil's Thumb (in Alaska) solo, they thought he had been smoking too much pot--they thought it was a "monumentally bad idea". But when he told Alaskans, they hardly reacted at all. They just wondered how much money there was in climbing such a mountain.

I am not a climber, but I find that Krakauer's writing style is ridiculously engaging. He puts you, the reader, right there on the mountain and lets you know how it feels. For a collection of non-fiction essays, this book is a real page-turner. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for lana.
195 reviews16 followers
December 8, 2012
I came to each of Krakauer's works independently- I read "Into the Wild" first on a recommendation, and years later I read "Into Thin Air" because someone told me it would be a good insight into the effects of altitude (as I prepared to climb Kilimanjaro, a mild but high peak). Finally, I found this collection of essays and realized that somehow I'd read the final essay somewhere before, once.

I can understand why some people think that Krakauer is a selfish bastard at times, because the very act of climbing is often a selfish one, in the eyes of others. Though Krakauer believes in the sacrosanct nature of the bond between ropemates, on Everest he notes that the nature of the beast drives many to an every-man-for-himself mentality. This is revisited in "A Bad Summer on K2" during a discussion of saving those near death at great risk to the lives of everyone else. Considering the effects of altitude on the human brain, I don't think any armchair philosophizing or moralizing applies here- people simply cannot and do not behave normally at 26000 feet, and everyone who climbs that high knows that to do so is to put your life on the line. Asking others to forsake theirs for a slim chance at saving yours... can we ever truly ask that of people? Every life is on the line in a storm. Is it more honorable to perish attempting to save someone (who may-and likely will- die despite your efforts) than it is to abandon them and hustle down to save your own skin? One reviewer commented on how selfish Krakauer was to risk his own life in such a callous manner as climbing the Devil's Thumb, and yet to risk his own life on Everest to attempt to save someone else seems more noble. Does anyone engaging in this armchair moralizing understand what it means to carry 180lb of dead weight down an mountain (without injuring the person further!) in bad conditions while you yourself are addled by altitude and saddled with gear, etc? I suppose these people think that such mountains should not be climbed at all.

But there it is. Some people will never understand why others are so willing to hang their entire lives on a half-inch of steel kicked or picked into ice a thousand feet off the ground. I think Krakauer does a good job of explaining the clarity ones life and mind take on when circumstances require such uncompromising focus on what is immediately in front of you. I think other athletes and aesthetes may have an easier time grasping this mentality, and perhaps will get greater enjoyment from this book.

I do wonder how the sport has changed in the last thirty years- many of these essays were written in the 80s and I imagine mentalities and technologies have changed things since then.

Profile Image for Maria V. Snyder.
Author 75 books17.4k followers
February 17, 2020
Despite having been to Mt. Everest base camp on the Tibetan side, I'm an armchair mountain climber. I enjoyed seeing the mountain and taking pictures, but was quite happy to get back to the hotel and climb into my warm bed. However, I love stories about mountain climbing and what people will do to get to the top. I admire their perseverance and courage - I watched the movie Free Solo two times! And I marvel over the dangers they face and sometimes the sheer stupidity - like going on a climb without being prepared. Then there's the heartbreak over the deaths.

This is a series of magazine articles Krakauer wrote for Outside, the Smithsonian, and others and they were all written in the late 1980s so it's a bit dated, but it was still a good read and gave some insight into the climber's mindset.
Profile Image for Barbara K.
707 reviews198 followers
July 17, 2024
What can I say? If you like reading Krakauer, you'll like this. Mountains, adventures, near-death (and actual death) experiences, and speculation on why people are compelled to take the risks of sports like climbing and canyoneering.

In the last chapter Krakauer describes and reflects on a poorly thought-out trip he made to solo climb a peak in Alaska when he was 23. I don't remember whether he references this in his book about Chris McCandless (Into the Wild) who was about the same age when he intentionally disappeared into the Alaskan wilderness, but I couldn't help but wonder whether his personal experience drove Krakauer's interest in McCandless.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
717 reviews48 followers
June 30, 2022
Nachdem ich letztes Jahr absolut geflasht war von Krakauers „In eisigen Höhen“, nahm ich mir zum einen vor, mehr von Krakauer zu lesen, zum anderen, insgesamt mehr über das Bergsteigen zu lesen.
Dieses Buch hier verbindet beide Vornehmungen: Auf den Gipfeln der Welt ist eine Sammlung von Krakauers Zeitschriftenartikeln, verfasst über einen langen Zeitraum hinweg in diversen Outdoor- und Klettermagazinen.

Insgesamt war „Auf den Gipfeln der Welt“ bei Weitem nicht so spannend wie „In eisigen Höhen“, aber das ist – denke ich – verständlich, schließlich kann Krakauer nicht ständig Todeskämpfe am Everest erleben. Allerdings war ich davon ausgegangen, dass es in dem Buch mehr um allgemeine Bergabenteuer oder Erstbesteigungen geht, nicht so viel um Krakauers eigene Klettererfahrungen. Grundsätzlich spricht das Buch eher ein Fachpublikum an und ist wahrscheinlich für Leser*innen, die selbst klettern, spannender als es jetzt für mich war.

Nicht so gut hat mir gefallen, dass Eigennamen von Bergen oder Spitznamen ins Deutsche übersetzt wurden. Macht man heutzutage ja nicht mehr so, aber meine Ausgabe ist auch ziemlich alt. Da aber die meisten Artikel über Ereignisse aus den 60er bis 80er Jahren sind, hat es mir insgesamt an Aktualität gefehlt, manche Fakten waren auch einfach überholt. Das ist natürlich klar, wenn das Buch schon über 20 Jahre auf dem Buckel hat, aber dadurch ist es eben auch keine Pflichtlektüre mehr.

Am besten gefallen hat mir das Kapitel „Ein schlechter Sommer am K2“. Einerseits, weil das der spannendste Artikel der Sammlung war, andererseits, weil Krakauer hier einmal ziemlich Klartext geredet hat, was Missstände in der Klettercommunity betrifft. Dabei kommt auch Everybody’s Darling und Talkshow-Dauergast Reinhold Messner nicht ganz ungestraft davon. Messner hatte damals betont, dass Klettern vor allem dann authentisch ist, wenn man mit möglichst wenigen Menschen, möglichst simpler Ausrüstung, ohne Sauerstoffzufuhr und in möglichst kurzer Zeit auf Berge steigt. In den 80er Jahren war das, was Urgestein Messner sagte, in der Kletterwelt Gesetz. Und so kostete dieser Ansatz des Bergsteigens in den Folgejahren vielen ambitionierten Bergsteigern, die Messners Grundsätzen gerecht werden wollten, das Leben. Natürlich kann man diese Unglücksfälle nicht Messner direkt anlasten, aber einen bitteren Beigeschmack hinterlässt es trotzdem.

Außerdem fand ich in diesem Artikel interessant, wie Krakauer verschiedene moralische Ansätze beim Bergsteigen vergleicht. Früher galt: Wir sind ein Team am Berg. Niemand wird zurückgelassen. Ende des 20. Jahrhunderts wurde daraus ein „wir sind ein Team, aber wenn es hart auf hart kommt, muss jeder selbst schauen, wo er bleibt“. Beide Ansätze haben ihre Berechtigung, Krakauer nimmt auch keine direkte Wertung vor, aber der Wandel des Zusammengehörigkeitsgefühls von Expeditionen war interessant nachzulesen.

Für ein Fachpublikum spannendes, für den allgemeinen Leser eher mäßig spannendes Sachbuch. Kann man mal lesen, muss man aber nicht.
2,75 🌟
Profile Image for Repix Pix.
2,550 reviews539 followers
July 2, 2021
No es uno de sus mejores libros pero las experiencias que cuenta son interesantes y motivadoras.
Profile Image for Matthew Mckinney.
31 reviews
April 14, 2014
Love Krakauer. These essays are somewhat dated, but still interesting and delivered in his inimitable style. The was the last book fo his I had not already read, and while it ranks near the bottom as far as favorites because of the datedness and form, I'm glad I read it and I hope he is working on his next.
Profile Image for Chris Lee (away).
209 reviews188 followers
November 27, 2022
I am a big fan of Jon Krakauer's other books, so I thought I would give his collection of essays on mountaineering a go. Each chapter encompasses an array of fascinating stories of the brave souls who attempt to climb peaks of dizzying heights. I was surprised to find a good collection of stories on pilots who drop off climbers, people who boulder, canyoneers, and how mountains are measured. 

I like the fact that each chapter is filled with details but is accessible as well. It has humor, heartbreak, and loads of tension. If you liked "Into Thin Air" and need to scratch that itch again, this will do it for you. 

 
Profile Image for Moe.
7 reviews6 followers
April 2, 2009
Although I enjoyed this collection immensely, the writing wasn't Krakauer's strongest -- in fact, I'd label it his weakest effort to date when compared with Into the Wild and Into Thin Air. With the exception of the last piece, "Devil's Thumb," the book was composed entirely of clipped magazine articles. And it showed.

Complaints aside, however, the book was wonderful and showed a humanity that I haven't often found in other climbing/mountaineering/alpinist books. Reading it reminded me how much I enjoy these adventure-fluff stories -- they're my equivalent of a romance novel -- and it has been the impetus for me to get back into the non-fiction adventure genre.

In short, read Eiger Dreams; it's a quick read, and I don't think you'll be disappointed.
Profile Image for Julie Ehlers.
1,117 reviews1,604 followers
September 10, 2015
After Jon Krakauer's Into Thin Air made him writer-famous, his publisher started pushing this essay collection, originally published in 1990, for readers who couldn't get enough of Krakauer's tales of mountains and the people who (attempt to) climb them. However, a lot of those readers, like me, were probably somewhat let down by this early effort, which consists largely of pieces Krakauer wrote for Outside magazine. The articles describing various mountains and mountain towns were educational, but not exactly riveting, and the profiles of well-known climbers were not uninteresting, exactly, but left me with a distinct why-am-I-reading-this feeling. The one humor piece, about how to survive in your tent for days as a blizzard rages outside, made it clear that while Krakauer might be a funny guy in person, he is no humor writer (and I think the topics he's chosen to write his books on bear this out).

This collection only really came alive for the last two essays, which, not coincidentally, are the two most reminiscent of Into Thin Air. One was an account of the horrific 1986 summer on K2, when 13 people died--more than had died on the peak in the past 84 years combined. Reading about the nightmarish conditions the climbers faced was absolutely riveting--although I felt guilty for deriving reading pleasure from their horrendous misfortunes, and at times was so disturbed I wondered if I'd have to hide the book.

The final essay, and the only one written especially for this book, was a memoir-like rendering of the time when Krakauer, as a 23-year-old, abandoned his dead-end job and took off alone for Alaska with the brazen certainty that he was going to scale the Devil's Thumb via its most difficult route, and that doing so would change his life. This engaging, suspenseful piece made me hope that someday Krakauer will grace us with a full-length memoir of his various adventures and their (sometimes serious) fallout.

So would I recommend Eiger Dreams? Well... not really. While I'm very glad I read the final two essays, I would say that on the whole this book is probably just for climbers and Krakauer completists. Everyone else would be better off reading Into the Wild and Into Thin Air instead.
Profile Image for Becky.
887 reviews149 followers
May 28, 2014
What a page turner! And also the perfect book to drag along rock climbing or on a hike, which is what I did. I sat on a boulder and devoured this book until it was my turn to climb or belay.

Krakauer’s narrative style is simple and straight forward but still evocative in its description of nature because he doesn’t add anything superfluous, and that’s as it should be- K2, Eiger, Chamoix, etc., do not favor the superfluous, and they certainly don’t need anyone to dress up their reputations. He draws senses of awe and fear from his reader by telling it like it is, and if you’re the outdoorsy type of person you’ll get it. I have no desire to try and summit McKinley, but I understand.

Some of the information and “celebrities” are a bit dated as this was a collection of articles that he wrote in the 80’s but it’s a great look at the history of the sport, and the dangers that you might very well face today particularly the overpopulation on mountain peaks where few have earned the right to climb but many have paid to clutter up the slopes.

All in all I was very impressed with Krakauer’s writing style and his subject, and I look forward to reading more in the future.
Profile Image for Kim.
14 reviews
July 31, 2009
In a previous book I had read by Krakauer "Into Thin Air"---about mountain climbing-- there was a quote that has stuck with me. One of the Everest mountaineers who chose not to try and help a climber (who subsequently died from being left behind) said this to justify his actions:
"There is no morality above 26,000 feet".

I had one foray into mountain climbing. It was 1998 and myself and two friends, Kevin and Lacey, were going to attempt the '14er' called Longs Peak. Out of all of the 14,000 foot peaks in Colorado Longs is the most popular climb because of its easy ascent. Imagine my surprise when at 2 am I was stumbling about in a rock field not understanding why my eyes would not and could not stay open. I had a massive head ache and could not keep my eyes open. I was not tired, I was jacked up on Diet Cokes and adrenaline, and yet could not keep my eyelids open for business. I was sans head lamp and found myself stumbling over boulders the size of pumpkins. That was the end of my journey. About 4 hours of hiking and turning back at who knows what altitude--I'd like to say I made it to 12 :D), my ascent to Longs was ended. We faced a bear sighting ahead of us on the hike back to our car(not good when one is menstruating, mind you!) and I was glad to make it home to my little apt at 18-J.

But I digress...shocking, I know. Since my wee little escapade into the wilds of the Colorado Rockies, I have always been fascinated by mountain climbers. And this book does not disappoint. Unlike other books on self-discovery (blah de blah de blah blah blaaaah) Eiger Dreams had some vivid moments of awareness that caused me to feel a real connection to the author. More importantly, it garnered a new level of respect for those who choose to make that their shining conquest. No, I will never know how it feels to summit Everest or climb, well, probably ever, over 12,000 ft, but Krakauer has a way of making the experience approachable and yet awe-inspiring at the same time.

In one instance he describes climbing a thin spire of rock on the Devil's Thumb in Alaska. He recalls the sensation of being attached to the rock by only crampons and an ice ax, and the overwhelming pulling sensation to let himself release the ax and just fall...fall back into the awaiting ice that would kill him 3000 feet below. He knows it will kill him, he knows the physics of the actions, yet still describes how he could not help himself. Quite possibly, it was the pull of gravity he was feeling. Not unlike the sensation of being on a ship in the Med on the way to Crete, and looking over the railing at midnight with the waves crashing like blocks of ice on a solid black sea. I got "the pull". I was blissed out of my gourd with hopefulness and youth and love, and I honestly thought I could slip over the railing and survive. I wanted. To. Feel. It.

This is a collection of short stories all interwoven on the foundation of mountaineering. Stories on glacier pilots who could land planes in white out conditions by knowing to 'turn left after a minute, turn right again after another minute' because they were so inured to the route they were traveling.
This is about the vagabonds and street fighters who climb perilous mountains in Tibet without permits and hide in the tall grasses when they hear cattle bells going by. This is about a boy's desire to summit Devil's Thumb and 18 years later trying to master that picture he'd traced so many times on pg 147.
If you are not into the outdoors, then this book will probably not impress you. If you believe that people who climb mountains are narcissistic selfish knobs who are only concerned about themselves (see above) then this is not for you. If you are married to a man who regales you with stories of men standing in circles around campfires and then waking to bears hours later in the dark...then you might appreciate this man's experiences.
If you live in Colorado and know where Pearl Street is in Boulder, and have felt the pull, than you may relate to this man's story. If you have been to Europe and had to fend off a loved one's near manic obsession with parasailing, then you should read this book.

John Menlove Edwards wrote the following, taken from him short story "Letter From A Man":

"So, as you would imagine, I grew up exuberant in body but with a nervy, craving mind. It was wanting something more, something tangible. It sought for reality intesnely, always if it were not there....But you see at once what I do. I climb".

Krakauer had a choice at the age of 8...go to Seattle and visit the Space Needle or go to the South Sister in Oregon and attempt his first summit. Glad he might the right choice.
Profile Image for Nora.
154 reviews11 followers
January 14, 2022
As always, Krakauer captures life-long dreams, defeats, and death-defying adventures in a few short pages. No one makes me simultaneously want to summit a mountain more or less.
Profile Image for Peter Tillman.
4,038 reviews476 followers
September 28, 2024
A collection of magazine essays from 1982 to 1989, plus one original, all new to me and all worth reading. Even if a couple are pretty grim. They hold up well, 30+ years on. Highly recommended: 4+ stars.

Krakauer is an amazingly good storyteller. I hadn’t realized that he caught the mountaineering bug after college, scaling back after he had some scary near-misses, saw some friends die, and got married. An insanely risky sport! But fun (mostly) to read about.

Highlights & quotes:
Here's legendary mountaineer Yvon Chouinard, in poorer days, before he started Patagonia: “In relatively flush times, Chouinard recalls, “we’d splurge and buy damaged cans of cat food. We’d get them for a dime apiece, and stock up for the entire summer.” Lest anyone get the wrong impression, Chouinard is quick to add that “it was the fancy kind of cat food, the tuna flavored stuff.”

“On Being Tentbound.”
“The driest way to sleep was to remove all of his wet clothing, wedge himself as best he could into his clammy but somewhat waterproof backpack (trying to ignore the fact that it was awash with the remnants of soggy Fig Newtons), pull a rain parka on over that, and only then slither into his wringing-wet sleeping bag. “Night after night,” he remembers, “I’d have this delirious, half-conscious dream that I’d be hiking down the glacier and come upon a warm, dry cabin. Just as I’d start to open the door I would always wake up, shivering uncontrollably, wet and sticky with Fig Newton crumbs.”

“The Burgess Boys.” Two Yorkshire lads who’d lived for years with no visible means of support, between climbing trips to Europe and the Himalayas. One of them even married into the Denver social register! “When I asked Lorna what she thought of having a husband who was absent four or five months of every year, she admitted she’d been “really miserable for the first couple of years, but now I kind of like it; I like the pattern of coming and going, the way it keeps the relationship from getting stale…. Adrian being gone isn’t nearly as bad as the way these goddamn expeditions monopolize the household when he’s getting ready to go.”

“Eiger Dreams.” Krakauer and a young partner take on the North Face in Winter. Final score: Eiger 3, climbers 0. “By God, I had survived! I sat down in the snow and began to laugh.”

David's review is the best I saw here: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Profile Image for Sundeep Supertramp.
336 reviews56 followers
November 21, 2012
Indeed, Jon Krakauer is the master of the literature of Adventure...

I always hated literature. They are always boring. But Jon has his way in literature. It is completely impossible for me to write so many worlds about a mountain. A mountain is a mountain for me. But for Jon, it is more like a book of worlds. I am damn sure that make him walk a tiny hill, in the outskirts of your town and he could write a book about it. That too, very interesting one. Hats off to him.

About this book:-

The description of the book claims to reveal answer for the most significant question, - why would a normal want to do this stuff (adventure stuff)? I, myself, several times, wondered the same. Why would anyone want to do something so dangerous, so life threatening; which doesn't earn a penny. So that is why I picked up this book.

But the book doesn't give you the answer!

If I am not wrong (if I haven't missed the story), there isn't an instance in the whole book, I felt that I found the answer. Instead, the book is a collection of 12 stories - 11 published by author in different magazines and newspapers, and the last one - THE DEVILS THUMB - is exclusive for the book.

About the stories:-

EIGER DREAMS
It is a collection of stories related to the many climbers who tried to climb the mountain - The Eiger - when the author, himself, tried to summit it.

GILL
Personally, I enjoyed this story very much. It introduced me to the whole new new concept of 'bouldering'. The whole story revolves around John Gill, the person who first started 'Bouldering' and the concept of 'Bouldering'.

To read the whole review, click the below link...
http://booksreviewwala.blogspot.in/20...
Profile Image for H (trying to keep up with GR friends) Balikov.
2,125 reviews819 followers
November 16, 2013
Krakauer knows mountains and he knows climbing, personally. What he gives us in this collection of articles, memoirs, and musings helps a non-climber, like me, come closer to figuring out why these guys and gals are willing to risk their lives on a rock face.

Those who have read his later works, including Into the Wild and Into Thin Air, will find some of this territory familiar. I, too, came to Eiger Dreams well after having other Krakauer works under my belt. Yet, his early storytelling techniques were more than adequate.

I wasn't sure what to expect. What I got was stories and observations relating to key mountains in North America, Europe and the Himalayas. As well as, profiles of some of the most celebrated and notorious alpinists (those who know how to climb), and some oddball permutations on the sport including bouldering and ice climbing.

At times, though he tries to talk to the layman, Krakauer will put together several sentences of alpinist jargon. A glossary would be a welcome addition to the copy I was reading. I terms of sheer enjoyment, he rightly uses his personal experience as bookends; covering climbs of Mt. Blanc and the Devils Thumb. His combination of humor and insight is a winner.
Profile Image for Tanja Berg.
2,279 reviews568 followers
July 17, 2024
This is a series of essays written a few decades ago about mountain climbing. I have read “into thin air” by the same author of course, but fell into this one as a follow up to “the god of the woods”. It’s a niche subject matter and I am not a climber, but I found it quite entertaining. He describes the cabin fever that ensues when you’re stuck in a small tent because of bad weather, and various adventures and misadventures. I can’t quite get it, I admit. Why risk your life to conquer a mountain just because it’s there? But it makes for great armchair adventure!
Profile Image for Kenny.
Author 29 books56 followers
April 15, 2011
I read Eiger Dreams many years after Into Thin Air, which detailed the tragedy on Everest in 1996. Eiger Dreams is a compendium of magazine articles Krakauer wrote in the 80s. I always wondered how Krakauer could be such a selfish, cowardly, and ultimately detestable human being, as he admits being near the summit of Everest, as he cowers safely in his tent after his own successful summiting, while others freeze to death in a blizzard on the mountaintop.

Well, now I know. Krakauer has always been obsessed with mountaineering, especially ice climbing. And his particular brand thereof is the macho solo attempt, expemplified by his foolhardy ascent of the Devil's Thumb in Alaska, done without proper preparation, zero connection with the outside world, a callous indifference to the impact his death might make on those who love him (he never even mentions the loss his parents will feel at his death, should it occur, even though his death is constantly on his mind as he hangs by two ice picks 750 feet above the glacier).

In fine, Krakauer is a narcissist apparently incapable of empathy or true sacrificial love for a fellow human.

But he's a hell of a writer.

When he dies in some stupid nature debacle, I, for one, will not shed a tear. He is who he is and his honesty about himself (it slips through in these essays and shouts full-throated in Into Thin Air) leaves no room for doubt: he will, eventually, get what he deserves. Nature, red in tooth and claw, is as honest and implacable in her truths as Krakauer is in his. We shall see who wins.

Profile Image for Nicholle.
90 reviews22 followers
October 27, 2025
4.5 actual
Jon Krakauer writes about his adventures in a way that doesn’t feel glorified or ostentatious, just real raw experience. He has a wonderful chapter about climbing the Devil’s Thumb in Alaska, the motivation to do so attributed to the assumption that reaching the summit would give him enlightenment or clarity in his life and his future, and instead he details the gruelling, isolating journey he took to get there, followed by a staunch lack of transformative experience from bagging the summit. He explains what he learned instead (which I won’t spoil), and this chapter is such a great example of why Krakauer is one of my favorite authors.
Profile Image for iva°.
738 reviews110 followers
August 31, 2024
kroz 12 priča, krakauer je u svojem ležernom stilu ispričao mnoštvo manje poznatih detalja i informacija o outdoors aktivnostima. dok većina, vjerojatno, zna da su hillary i tenzing prvi ljudi na everestu i da postoji neka visoka planina koja se zove K2, ovo je zbirka krakauerovih dogodovština i susreta s ljudima koje su manje poznate i od kojih će ljubiteljima planina i ekstremnih doživljaja rasti zazubice. odstupa od klasičnih putopisa i daje pogled "iznutra", npr. kako je boraviti u šatoru dok traje mećava pet dana i čime da se čovjek okupira na 2x2 m prostora a da ne izgubi razum.
duhovito, britko, lucidno i informativno.
Profile Image for Erin Spencer.
43 reviews1 follower
February 11, 2025
Honestly Krakauer is a great writer, but I shouldn’t have read into the wild and Eiger dreams back to back… Apparently, I can only handle so much of the 'white man tries to conquer nature’-genre of books when I’m also surrounded by it everyday living in Boulder 😶‍🌫️
Profile Image for Robin.
423 reviews5 followers
October 20, 2017
I first read this book Oct 26, 2013. Following is my review.
This book has exciting stories of mountain/rock climbers all over the world. The first few had me on the edge of my seat. After that, however, the stories got old.

The second time was Oct.20, 2017. Following is my review.
The men and women in these short stories are ADDICTED to mountain climbing. Each story is about somebody’s insane desire to climb a mountain and the lengths they are willing to go to in order to achieve that dream. Each of them spends time in imminent danger of death. It is exciting and educational to read about their stories. I, personally wouldn’t have minded if there were only half as many stories, however. I didn’t like reading on and on about so many scrapes with ice, winds and death. I did learn interesting things about some of the biggest mountains in the world, though, which was nice.
Profile Image for Julie.
621 reviews4 followers
November 5, 2013
Jon Krakauer is one of my very favorite nonfiction writers. If you haven't read any of his books, then you must read either Into the Wild or Into Thin Air (don't start with this one). This book is somewhat similar to the latter, in that it deals with mountain climbing, but this is a collection of shorter pieces he published in magazines, whereas Into Thin Air tells the story of a particularly deadly season on Mount Everest. I am one of those people who cannot imagine wanting to summit Everest, who thinks that most of those serious climbers are just crazy. But Krakauer makes me feel like I can almost understand why these people risk their lives on such extreme climbs. The pieces in Eiger Dreams are set around the world--Alaska, Europe, the Himalaya--and introduce the reader to some of the interesting and slightly crazy people who climb mountains.
Profile Image for Alexander Patino.
54 reviews129 followers
April 17, 2015
So I approached this book thinking - I climb, I'm obsessed with mountains and Jon Krakauer is great, this should be fun. In the end I was like WHY AREN'T ALL OF THESE STORIES MOVIES!?!?!?! Seriously - every single story in here is just really fantastic. The most satisfying collection of essays I've read in quite a while.
Profile Image for Audrey Approved.
939 reviews284 followers
April 26, 2024
Krakauer + mountains is always a good combo. While Eiger Dreams might not be my favorite of Krakeuer's books, I still really enjoyed it. In this collection of previously pushed articles, Krakauer expounds on why men (and it’s mostly men, not women) climb big mountains at great cost - emotionally, physically and fiscally. Eiger Dreams follows some interesting personalities as they attempt to conquer the world’s most famous peaks, like K2, Denali and El Capitan - but he also expounds on the birth of ice climbing and bouldering, to the culture of mountain towns, to how one should go about picking the right expedition partner. There’s something about Krakauer’s writing that is both expansive and insightful yet so very readable, and I blazed through this audiobook in a few of days. Some of these stories I wish were full length books!

This is my fourth read by Krakauer (I’ve also read Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Mount Everest Disaster, Into the Wild and Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith) but I’m looking to round out the rest of his backlist by the end of this year!
Profile Image for Tamara Covacevich.
124 reviews5 followers
October 11, 2025
I was in Spain with some friends from London and I was telling them about the chapter of Canyoneering in the local mountain adventure guidebook, and how I had never considered it a worthy activity until I saw an Alex Honnold Instagram post going down a canyon with friends. They gave me this book to read one of the chapter which was about Canyoneering and then on the flight back / day after in between packing for moving out I finished it. Very enjoyable read! Each essay is independent of each other, but the writing style is very similar throughout. Also made me realize I haven't read much american mountaineering literature, so it was interesting to dive into more details around Alaskan expeditions other than the classics like Denali. I've never read about the Burgess brothers despite them bring British, and they seem funny characters, added their book to the to read list!

"I don't feel as though I'm entirely succesful on a boulder problem if I don't achieve that feeling of lightess", "find ways of getting more and more out of less and less" - Gill (bouldering chapter)

".. backcountry play. True canyoneering is a hybrid of rock climbing, river running, and but-ass backpacking; if what you're doing doesn't involve a healthy slice of three, it's simply not the genuine article" - Fisher (canyoneering chapter)

"the 'mountain sense'"

"Although my plan to climb the Devils Thumb wasn't fully hatched until the spring of 1977, the mountains have been lurking in the recesses of my mind for about 15 years"
Profile Image for Asia.
518 reviews5 followers
June 17, 2023
Tytuł książki sugeruje, że jest to książka o Eigerze i w tym właśnie celu została przeze mnie wypożyczona z biblioteki. Nic podobnego. To zbiór dwunastu górskich felietonów, z których Eiger jest tylko zaledwie kilkustronicowym opisem wyprawy północą ścianą Eigeru z 1936 roku. I tyle. Moja wina, bo książkę wzięłam w ciemno bez żadnego wczytywania się w opis na tylnej stronie okladki i teraz mam trochę problem z jej oceną, ponieważ z jednej strony książka nie do końca spełniła moje oczekiwania, z drugiej - czytało mi się ją zaskakująco dobrze. Opowiadania napisane są w stylu luźnym i rozrywkowym, z masą przeróżnych, fajnych ciekawostek i wskazówek m.in o sposobach dokonywania pomiarów wysokości gór czy o niebezpieczeństwwch transportu lotniczego w górach Alaski. Mowa też o tym jak radzić sobie z nudą w górach i o tym, co najlepiej ze sobą w nie zabrać - ponoć najlepiej sprawdzają się tutaj dobre, trafione lektury i sprawdzeni przyjaciele.

Miałam tę książkę pozostawić z początku bez żadnej oceny. Po namyśle stwierdziłam jednak, że zrobiłabym jej tym samym bardzo dużą krzywdę. Książka mimo, że zawiera bardzo skąpe informacje o Eigerze, o którym chciałam poczytać coś więcej, potrafi obronić się bogactwem naprawdę świetnych ciekawostek więc muszę oddać jej trochę sprawiedliwości i potraktować ją oceną trochę wyższą od tej początkowo zamierzonej, czyli - żadnej.
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