| Eiger Dreams: Ventures Among Men and Mountains |  | Auteur: Jon Krakauer Créateur: Jon Krakauer Éditeur: Dell Pub Co
Acheter Neuf: EUR 27,00
Neuf (1) D'occasion (3) de EUR 1,75
Média: Poche Poids (kg): 0.3 Dimension (cm): 7 x 4.3 x 0.8
ISBN: 0440209900 Code Décimal Dewey: 796 EAN: 9780440209904 ASIN: 0440209900
Date de publication: Septembre 1992 Disponibilité: Expedition sous 1 a 2 jours ouvres Expédition: Livraison internationale disponible Condition: Expédié depuis Londres, Royaume-Uni. Livraison sous 10-14 jours ouvrables. Service clientéle prompt et efficace.
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Amazon.com No matter what the actual temperature may be, several pages into Eiger Dreams you will begin to shiver. Halfway through you will acquire a new appreciation for your fingers, toes, and the fact that you still have a nose. And by the end of this collection, you'll define some commonly used phrases in an entirely different way. The understated "catch some air" and the whimsical "log some flight time" are climbers' euphemisms for falling, while "crater" refers to what happens when you log some flight time all the way to the ground. "Summiting," the term for reaching the top of a mountain, seems almost colorless in comparison. The various heroes, risk-takers, incompetents, and individualists Krakauer captures are more than colorful, whether they summit or not. The author is more interested in exploring the addiction of risk--the intensity of effort--than mere triumph. There's the mythical minimalist climber, John Gill, whose fame "rests entirely on assents less than thirty feet high," and the Burgess brothers--freewheeling, free-floating English twins who seem to make all the right decisions when it counts, and hence most often fail to reach the top. Of course, they are alive. Over these and other talented climbers hangs a malignant, endlessly creative nature--its foehn winds can make people crazy and its avalanches do far worse. Eiger Dreams is an adrenaline fest for the weary, an overdue examination of a stylish, brave subculture. As one of the heroes Krakauer outlines says of his occupation, "It's sort of like having fun, only different."
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Merlin's Cave | |