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High Crimes: The Fate of Everest in an Age of Greed

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Manufacturer: Hyperion

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Binding: Hardcover Dewey Decimal Number: 796.522 EAN: 9781401302733 ISBN: 1401302734 Label: Hyperion Manufacturer: Hyperion Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 368 Publication Date: 2008-02-05 Publisher: Hyperion Release Date: 2008-02-05 Studio: Hyperion
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Editorial Reviews:
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In the years following the publication of Into Thin Air, much has changed on Mount Everest. Among all the books documenting the glorious adventures in mountains around the world, and the unique perils and challenges of Mount Everest, none details how the recent infusion of wealth into the mountains is reacting with the age-old lust for glory to draw crime to the highest places on the planet, how a mountain's ability to reduce climbers to their essential selves is revealing villains as well as heroes, greed as well as selflessness. The change is caused both by a tremendous boom in traffic to the world's mountains and a new class of parasitic and predatory adventurer. Some of the stories included in the book are the tragic story of Nils Antezana, a climber who died on Everest after he was abandoned by his guide, and the author's own summit story, as he participated in the Connecticut Everest Expedition, which would never have followed George Dijjmarescu and Lhakpa Sherpa to the Himalaya had news of the couple's climb with the Romanian team the previous year made it to the United States. But as they neared the frigid peril of Everest, the charming couple turned increasingly hostile. Women on the team held little power and were instead threatened, stalked, and harassed before a final assault. Those that tried to stand against the violence, theft and intimidation found the worst of the peril they encountered on Everest had followed them home to Connecticut. Beatings, thefts, drugs, prostitution, coercion, threats, and abandonment on the highest slopes of Everest and other mountains have become the rule rather than the exception, and Kodas describes many of these experiences and explores the larger issues these stories raise with thriller-like intensity.
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Not much respect for the mountain here Comment: Wow. This book was all over the place. The author began with one story, then switched to another, than another, with a lot of loose ends dangling behind him.
A good question would be, "what were most of these people doing on this mountain in the first place, including the author?" If you need a guide and Sherpas to get you up there, you probably don't belong climbing a mountain like this. And what was a 69 year old man doing climbing this mountain? I think that is the best question of all. I remember reading about earlier expeditions when the only ones climbing Everest earned the right because of their skill.Maybe that is the ONLY way this mountain should be climbed in the future, if at all.
I am tired of the environmental damage caused all over our beautiful planet by driven people who must take their risks and prove themselves in some way. These climbers-all high acheivers-need to think about respect for nature and the mountain rather than their own ambitions. We can feel sorry for Nils family, etc., but these people are taking huge risks with their lives, and putting others at risk also, especially the Sherpas.
Customer Rating:      Summary: this book is too scattered Comment: I did'nt like this book the people and events involved were all scattered and hard to keep up with.I am glad I got it from the library rather than payingfor it.
Customer Rating:      Summary: SAVE YOUR MONEY Comment: A very poorly written book in terms of organization. But it confirms my impression that people who climb Everest are mostly narcissistic, selfish, self-centered people whose lives are meaningless. Climb the Rocky Mountains or go help someone if you are so bored with life. The author is no different psychologically than the other selfless losers who go to Everest.
Customer Rating:      Summary: The Hellbent Usually Get There Comment: Anyone who hasn't heard by now that Everest has in recent years become a magnet for fools, scoundrels, parasites, and mountebanks of every type, variety and nationality must have been living in a cave. This work gathers together abundant further evidence of this lamentable fact.
Kodas provides enough examples of villainy to make for reading both fascinating and depressing. He also describes considerable gratuitous tragedy. The detritus on the mountain contains not just used oxygen canisters and garbage but also corpses. The Sherpa guides and bearers, a group that has been romanticized over the years, come off no better than anyone else; many are cowardly, lazy, greedy and dishonest.
Exciting as the story is, there are problems. In attempting to cover every scandal, theft, brawl and mishap he has heard about, Kodas wanders into too many tangents. The narrative is meandering and discursive. Despite all the gripping details, there are also a lot of unexplained gaps in the story, particularly regarding Kodas's own role and that of his wife in the Connecticut expedition he helped to assemble.
Among those recruited for the Connecticut expedition are a thuggish Romanian émigré and his ambitious and manipulative wife, an illiterate Sherpa whom the Romanian is in the habit of beating up. Other members of the ragtag group are little better; the only thing they seem to have in common is a desire to climb Everest on the cheap. Why the author assisted in putting together so disreputable a gang, which soon falls apart in bitter rivalries and angry disputes over money, gear and thefts, is a mystery. Was it ignorance or naiveté? Or was it cynicism, knowing that a good yarn could be spun from it?
Kodas himself sought to climb Everest in 2004 and 2006 though he appears to lack the required skills and experience. He fails, though he returns relatively unscathed which is not true of many others who suffer death or irreparable physical damage.
All of which raises the question underlying the entire sordid saga: what is it that annually propels hundreds of people from all over the globe to undertake a mission which is hugely expensive, enormously physically taxing, extremely dangerous, and for which there is little reward?
It is a compulsion no rational explanation can sustain. But as an old saying goes: "The hellbent usually get there".
Customer Rating:      Summary: A Hodge-Podge of Disorganized Climbing Adventures Comment: I found this book poorly organized. It was as if the author threw all the pages of his manuscript in the air and once they hit the floor he gathered them up and bound them into a book. It jumps from Everest to South America to Pakistan to the US and back again and it has very little to do with the secondary title "The Fate of Everest in an Age of Greed". If you are hoping for another "In to Thin Air" quality book you are going to have to look elsewhere.
One of the previous reviewers used the term "sour grapes" and by the time I got to the end of this book I had the same feeling. Since he is a journalist (pssst .... Michael, don't quit your day job!!!) I got the feeling he was using this book as his chance to get back at virtually everyone he had ever met.
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