Knihobot

Greg Child

    Mixed Emotions
    Over the Edge
    Climbing Free
    Mimo nebezpečí : rozhovory s horolezci
    • Mimo nebezpečí : rozhovory s horolezci

      • 344 stránek
      • 13 hodin čtení
      4,0(3)Ohodnotit

      Rozhovory s následujícími horolezci: Walter Bonatti Chris Bonington Riccardo Cassin Tomo Česen Peter Croft Catherine Destivellová Kurt Diemberger Jean-Claude Droyer Wolfgang Güllich Warren Harding Lynn Hillová Sir Edmund Hillary Wojciech Kurtyka Jeff Lowe Reinhold Messner Royal Robbins Doug Scott

      Mimo nebezpečí : rozhovory s horolezci
    • Climbing Free

      • 288 stránek
      • 11 hodin čtení
      4,2(1213)Ohodnotit

      Hill describes her famous climb and meditates on how she harnesses the strength and courage to push herself to such extremes.

      Climbing Free
    • Over the Edge

      • 328 stránek
      • 12 hodin čtení
      3,7(44)Ohodnotit

      Originally published: New York: Villard Books, c2002.

      Over the Edge
    • Mixed Emotions

      Mountaineering Writings of Greg Child

      * Includes five previously unpublished essays* Powerful prose sparked with Child's unique witWell-known for his Himalayan expeditions and first ascents on rock walls in Australia and the United States, Greg Child freely admits his mixed feelings about climbing. Overwhelming are the loss of friends, the thrill of achievement, and the soul-shattering moments of risk and survival; but it is precisely these experiences that compel him to write and to continue climbing.In Mixed Emotions, Child remembers the mountains, the people, and the episodes that have made him feel his life acutely, including the 1986 K2 tragedy that killed 13 climbers; a near-fatal snakebite in his native Australia; and the loss of climbing partner Pete Thexton. He recalls his associations with world-renowned mountaineers Doug Scott, John Roskelley, Voytek Kurtyka, and Don Whillans. Child also narrates fascinating off-mountain journeys to a secluded Hindu shrine, and the remote, harsh landscape of the Baltoro Glacier, where progress has left its indelible mark.Finally, Child comments on some less tangible aspects of climbing, such as the ghostly presence that accompanies climbers under duress, and the meanings of and inevitable meetings with death.

      Mixed Emotions