![]() ![]() While it has become popular to consider climbing Everest a lark and the South Col approach little more than a yak route, Krakauer found the altitude a malicious force that turned his blood to sludge and his extremities to wood, that ate his brain cells. From childhood, Krakauer had wanted to climb Everest he was an expert on rock and ice, although he had never sojourned at Himalayan altitudes. Many experienced alpinists were dismayed that the fabled 8,000-meter summits were simply "being sold to rich parvenues'' with neither climbing grace nor talent, but possessed of colossal egos. ![]() In the spring of 1996, Krakauer took an assignment from Outside magazine to report on the burgeoning industry of commercially guided, high-altitude climbing. ![]() And onto thin ice-Krakauer's ( Into the Wild, 1995) hypnotic, rattling, firsthand account of a commercial expedition up Mt. ![]()
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