7.8 /10 1 Votes
Country United Kingdom Publication date June 28, 1997 Originally published 28 June 1997 Genre Non-fiction Publisher St. Martin's Press | 3.9/5 Goodreads Language English Media type Print ISBN 0312168144 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Subject 1996 Mount Everest disaster Non-fiction books Into Thin Air, After the Wind, Touching My Father's Soul: A S, Eiger Dreams, Ghosts of Everest: The Sear |
The Climb (1997), republished as The Climb: Tragic Ambitions on Everest, is an account by a Russian/Kazakh mountaineer Anatoli Boukreev of the 1996 Everest Disaster, during which eight climbers lost their lives on Mount Everest. The co-author, G. Weston DeWalt—who was not part of the expedition—provides accounts from other climbers and ties together the narrative of Boukreev's logbook.
The book is also partially a response to Jon Krakauer's account of the same 1996 Everest climb in his book Into Thin Air (1997), which appeared to criticize some of Boukreev's actions during the climb.
After The Climb was published, DeWalt leveled many public criticisms at Krakauer concerning the accuracy of each man's account of what happened on the mountain during the 1996 climbs. Krakauer details the disagreements, and his rapprochement with Boukreev, in the postscript to the 1999 edition of Into Thin Air.