Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Mt. Everest Disaster by Jon Krakauer — book cover

Book details

Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Mt. Everest Disaster

by Jon Krakauer

1997 · Vintage

About the book

Jon Krakauer chronicles the 1996 Mount Everest disaster, during which eight climbers died in a single storm. Initially assigned by Outside magazine to report on the commercialization of the peak, Krakauer joined Rob Hall’s Adventure Consultants expedition. The narrative details the logistical hurdles of high-altitude logistics, the physical toll of hypoxia, and the specific bottlenecks at the Hillary Step that delayed hikers beyond their safe turnaround times. Krakauer provides a minute-by-minute investigation of the technical errors and communication failures that occurred while descending during a sudden blizzard.

This memoir is for mountaineers, outdoor enthusiasts, and readers interested in human performance under extreme physiological stress. It offers a technical look at the risks of commercial guiding in the "death zone" and the ethical dilemmas of high-altitude rescue operations. Readers gain an understanding of how small oversights and oxygen deprivation cloud judgment in life-threatening environments. The book serves as a case study on the consequences of hubris and the logistical realities of the highest point on Earth.

Details

Published
1997
Publisher
Vintage
ISBN
9780679462712
Language
EN