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Monday, April 20, 2020

Into the Clouds: The Race to Climb the World's Most Dangerous Mountain


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Here's a scavenger hunt to go along with this great title: https://todolson.wpengine.com/into-the-clouds/


Olson, Tod. Into the Clouds: The Race to Climb the World's Most Dangerous Mountain
April 21st 2020 by Scholastic Focus
E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus

The K2 mountain in the Himalayas is the second highest in the world after Mt. Everest, and is significantly more dangerous. In 1938, a young American medical student, Charlie Houston, lead an expedition to survey the area and decide the best way to ascend the mountain. The following year, the Karakoram expedition led by Fritz Wiessner attempted to climb to the top, but the mission was beset by personality problems and poor weather, and ended in the death of Dudley Wolfe, who was left behind by his fellow climbers after a series of disastrous circumstances. Three sherpas also died in an attempt to bring him back. In 1953, Houston mounted another expedition, choosing his men wisely in the hopes that they would not turn on each other the way Wiessner's men did. He selected six men, including Art Gilkey, a geologist from Iowa, and Dee Molenaar, who left a wife and daughter back at home. While parts of the trip went well, the group had to wait out weather and also had to deal with the illness of Gilkey, who developed blood clots in his leg and was unable to travel under his own steam. Instead of trying to get to the top, the team attempted to get Gilkey to safety. Unfortunately, his body was swept away after a horrific incident when six of the climbers fell and were saved by one man being able to hold onto the rope connecting them, and being able to pull them to safety. After that expedition, Houston gave up climbing, and once an Italian team was able to make the summit, the spotlight was off the Karakoram expedition.

This book is not only filled with a wealth of technical information about the intricacies of climbing a mountain (Literal tons of food! Sunglasses to prevent snow blindness, which sounds awful! Why you need way more pitons that you ever expected! Also, outfit your sherpas a whole lot better. And you can wear your extra socks as mittens in a pinch.), but is told in a very exciting way. Climbing a mountain has never seemed like a good idea to me, but Houston's adventures certainly make for riveting reading.

There are strong glimpses into the men involved in the climb as well. Houston's motivations are examined, and there's even a touch of philosophy about why people engage in extreme climbing. Dee Molenaar's desire just to get off the mountain and back to his family was especially poignant reading, since he passed away on January 19, 2020, as I was reading this book. The mission with Wiessner, though not a major portion of the book, was a helpful inclusion, since it showed what happened when communication wasn't good and there was tension between the climbers.

Readers of Roland Smith's Peak series need this book to show the realities of an actual climb, and the photographs will interest those readers a lot! Fans of other survival stories, such as the Wallace's Bound by Ice or Lourie's Locked in Ice, will find this to be filled with the same type of riveting survival details those books have. This almost makes me want to find another copy of Ullman's Banner in the Sky; at least Houston's men had gloves and proper hiking boots!


10 comments:

  1. I've enjoyed books like this before, mostly adult ones, but this sounds very good. Thanks, Karen!

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  2. This sounds like an intense adventure story and a great opportunity to learn some history. Glad you enjoyed it!

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  3. I didn't know about most of the details of mountain climbing that you mentioned, so it sounds like I'd learn a lot from this book! Thanks for the great review!

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  4. Climbing the K2 has interested so many climbers. It is interesting to hear how really unequipped they were in the 1950s, as opposed to mountain climbers today. I can only imagine the hardship, which came through in your fascinating review.

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  5. I really like books about climbing. This sounds like a good introduction for kids. I really enjoyed One More Step, which was about a man with cerebral palsy who climbed Mt Kilimanjaro. I was so impressed with how much training and preparation goes into climbing.

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  6. Reading this book helped me understand the reasons why anyone in their right mind would attempt such a climb. Thanks for featuring this title on MMGM.

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  7. My goodness, how intense! I've struggled to understand the motivation behind deadly climbs, so it would probably be a good read for me. I've only climbed in Colorado -- nothing like Mt. Everest or the Himalayas. I remember dropping my camera in one especially steep section. I watched it tumble and tumble down the slope, thinking it was gone. I mean, it was a disposable camera anyway (and for good reason). But one of the climbers in our group suddenly started heading down and, much to my surprise, brought my camera back to me a short while, later. Anyway, thanks for sharing a new title! I'll add this to my list.

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  8. I agree with Linda that this is an interesting subject not often told so realistically for students. Thanks for the post!

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  9. This sounds incredibly intense. I don't read much about mountain climbing. My acrophobia makes it difficult to even read about this. But this sounds pretty well-written. Thanks for the post.

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  10. This sounds like a lot of fun. I don't climb but I do like to read about it.

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