Courageous climbs

The mountains have long been a magnet for the adventurous. This book chronicles some daring feats
Courageous climbs
Courageous climbs
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2 min read

Chris Bonington and his boys were the first generation of climbers to revolutionise alpine and high-altitude climbing after the ascent of Everest. Many of them died pushing the limits. Clint Willis claims to answer whether it was worth it. He doesn&rsquot. No one, including climbers, can ever tell you why and whether it was worth the risk.

As is apparent in the title of Lionel Terray&rsquos book, Conquistadors of the Useless, climbing is inherently a useless activity. Once upon a time, national pride and traditional exploration were at stake. No more. Many of the big &lsquofirsts&rsquo had been done. What was next Well, next was what Bonington&rsquos boys set out to do. Climbing the hardest mountains of the world by their hardest routes.

The story starts with Bonington&rsquos incredible first ascents in the Alps&mdashsuch as the first ascent of the Freney Pillar, and climbs on the Eiger North Wall. It chronicles the accounts of expeditions he and his &lsquoboys&rsquo did in the Himalayas. It&rsquos a little breathless, and perhaps to those not interested deeply enough, repetitive. But it&rsquos true. And that&rsquos what hits you.

It&rsquos about the infamous epic on the Ogre in the Karakoram, where Dougal Haston broke both legs falling off the ends of the rope on a rappel off the summit and crawled through a storm for days. It&rsquos the story of Mick Burke, who died while pushing for the summit. It&rsquos about Joe Tasker and Peter Boardman who climbed Indian mountains by high-altitude rock routes that no Indian climber has ever even thought of repeating. They died high on the unclimbed West Ridge of Everest, of sheer bloody exhaustion. Willis tells his or her stories with the first-hand awareness of someone who&rsquos been there enough to imagine it.

The Boys of EverestClint Willis (Robson, Rs 1,024) is about boys who had a sense of who they wanted to be&mdashsomething extraordinary. Boys who were looking for enlightenment without understanding what that meant. It&rsquos about the myth of heroes. Because that is what climbing is about.

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