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Dark Shadows Falling - 9780898865905

List Price: $18.95
SKU:
9780898865905
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  • Product Details

    Author:
    Joe Simpson
    Format:
    Paperback
    Pages:
    208
    Publisher:
    Mountaineers Books (December 31, 1999)
    Language:
    English
    Audience:
    General/trade
    ISBN-13:
    9780898865905
    ISBN-10:
    0898865905
    Dimensions:
    6.5" x 9.5"
    File:
    mountaineerbooks-Mountaineers_Books_Metadata_20210610172735-20230622.xml
    Folder:
    mountaineerbooks
    List Price:
    $18.95
    Case Pack:
    38
    As low as:
    $14.40
    Publisher Identifier:
    P-MISC
    Discount Code:
    CD
    Pub Discount:
    55
  • Overview


    * Concise, objective account of the 1996 Everest debacle
    * One of Simpson's most controversial and challenging books
    * Short listed for the 1997 Boardman Tasker Award

    In 1992, an Indian climber was left to die alone high on the South Col of Mount Everest by other climbers who watched his feebly waving hand from the security of their tent thirty yards away. Some film footage of his corpse was later shown on television. Why did these onlookers not hold the dying man's hand and comfort him? The answer appalls Joe Simpson, who was himself left for dead in a crevasse at the foot of Siula Grande in Peru in 1985.

    It is an uncomfortable ethical question that he is forced to confront as he attempts a difficult new route on Pumori, with a clear view of the whole South Col from close to the vantage point where Eric Shipton first spotted the way up the south side of Everest taken by Hillary and Tenzing in 1953. Now that Everest has become the playground of the rich, where commercial operators offer guided tours to the top up fixed ropes, camping amidst the detritus and unburied corpses of previous less fortunate climbers, Simpson wonders if the noble, caring instincts that once characterized mountaineering have been irrevocably displaced as in other facets of today's society.

    On investigation, he finds it a less black and white issue that at first it seemed. "I shall never forget the horror of dying alone, the awful empty loneliness of it," he says. Yet his empathy for the victims of storms, altitude sickness, or misjudgments, is tested time and again as he explores anecdotally and in conversations with his companions on Pumori, the moral climate of mountaineering in the 1990s.