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Paperback High Exposure: An Enduring Passion for Everest and Unforgiving Places Book

ISBN: 0684865459

ISBN13: 9780684865454

High Exposure: An Enduring Passion for Everest and Unforgiving Places

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Book Overview

For generations of resolute adventurers, from George Mallory to Sir Edmund Hillary to Jon Krakauer, Mount Everest and the world's other greatest peaks have provided the ultimate testing ground. But the question remains: Why climb? In High Exposure, elite mountaineer and acclaimed Everest filmmaker David Breashears answers with an intimate and captivating look at his life. For Breashears, climbing has never been a question of risk taking: Rather, it...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

CLIMB EVERY MOUNTAIN...

This is a terrific book which draws you into David Breashears' world. You follow his development from young rock climber to world class mountaineer and filmmaker. You also see his development as a person, all while drawing you into that exclusive club of mountaineers. He makes you feel his passion for the mountains he so loves. You learn how he combined that passion with the art of cinematography, making him an award winning filmmaker. You live through the 1996 tragedy on Everest with him, and feel the compassion that he has for those who died on the mountain under such tragic circumstances. The narrative is always compelling and informative, making the book a hard one to put down. His compassion and sensitivity towards those who did not fare well on the ill-fated 1996 Everest climb is palpable, and for his assistance to those who needed it, even though it put him and his expedition in jeopardy, he is truly an unsung hero. This is, without a doubt, a man who leads by example.David Breashears writes beautifully of his experiences and his book is a must read for all climbing enthusiasts, as well as for those simply interested in the human condition. This is a book that is simply too good to pass up.

Spellbinding Account Of The Tragic Events Of '96 Climb!

This first-hand account of the frightening and absolutely breath-talking adventures on the slopes of Mount Everest during the ill-fated 1996 American climbing expedition is terrific reading. Brashears, a professional cinematographer, had already climbed Everest previous to this expedition, and his prize-winning documentary IMAX film about the ascent of Everest is itself both entertaining and edifying, as it holds no punches regarding the reality of life on the mountain. Neither does this book, which certainly proves that the author has a future in journalism is he chooses to pursue it. His colorful and well-written autobiography also does great service in helping those of us who prefer to have our adventure while sitting in the comfort of our reading room just what it is that draws people like him to the pursuit of mountaineering. Indeed, his gleeful enthusiasm is close to being contagious; this too is testimony to Brashears' ability to write convincingly and well. His approach is so colorful as to blur the lines between biography and fiction, and I often found myself having to remember that all this really did happen. It is that well written.His beginnings, too, seem like the stuff of popular fiction; a childhood of humility and privation, his early exploits in climbing on a virtual shoestring, his wildcat days in the oil field, all seem to fit this persona that wangles his way into situations and then has the gumption, intelligence, and character to pull it all off. He progresses with climbs both domestically and internationally, finally reaching into Nepal and Tibet. Always with him is this sense of humor on the one hand, and a willingness to take risks that most of just would turn away from. One senses he is heading for even more danger and self-discovery. Of course, the key to the book is his description of the events leading up to, including, and after the tragic catastrophe and loss of several climbers' lives in the ascent of the mountain. Busy himself with both the climb on the one hand and the IMAX filming of it on the other left him little time for instant reflection or remorse. These things probably helped him to focus on what had to be done to go on with the successful climb, the discovery of the bodies, and a safe descent to the camps far below. I found myself sorry to reach the final pages of his book, and I for one hope to find more writing from this talented filmmaker, writer, and climber in the future. I can highly recommend this book, and I think you will enjoy it, as well.

Autobiographies don't get much better

Right off the bat, readers will notice that Breashears has a knack for writing. Whereas Greg Child's natural talent surfaces through his wit and humour, David's writing style shines in his ability to make you empathise with him on every occasion. He obviously posseses the determination of a climber, and the insight of a top-notch photographer/cinematographer. Not only is the writing remarkable, but his life-story is absolutely fascinating. Many climbers have a fairly predictable story-line to their autobiographies, but Breashears' tale twists and turns as he juggles not only a climbing career, but a photographic and cinematic one as well. Don't pass this one up. Stories from old-school climbers are fading, and Breashear's tale should certainly be acknowledged and preserved.

WORLD CLASS CLIMBER...WORLD CLASS FILMMAKER..WORLD CLASS READ

This is a terrific book which draws you into David Breashears' world. You follow his development from young rock climber to world class mountaineer and filmmaker. You also see his development as a person, all while drawing you into that exclusive club of mountaineers. He makes you feel his passion for the mountains he so loves. You learn how he combined that passion with the art of cinematography, making him an award winning filmmaker. You live through the 1996 tragedy on Everest with him, and feel the compassion that he has for those who died on the mountain under such tragic circumstances. The narrative is always compelling and informative, making the book a hard one to put down. His compassion and sensitivity towards those who did not fare well on the ill-fated 1996 Everest climb is palpable, and for his assistance to those who needed it, even though it put him and his expedition in jeopardy, he is truly an unsung hero. This is, without a doubt, a man who leads by example. David Breashears writes beautifully of his experiences and his book is a must read for all climbing enthusiasts, as well as for those simply interested in the human condition. This is a book that is simply too good to pass up.

Breashears' Adventures are fascinating and illuminating

David Breashears has been to Mount Everest eleven times. That's more times than I have visited our local SuperMegaMall. But yet from reading High Exposure, each trip to the Himalayas was far from routine. They all tested the limits of human endurance and perseverence. His eloquence in recounting his life reveals a man of character and discipline, but also a man who has regrets and self doubts. I particularly appreciated his recounting of his early years. Breashears lived in geographic proximity to me (he is an alumnus of my high school), but existed in a vastly different world, the "vertical world". Climbing and bouldering in Eldorado Springs and Boulder Canyon as well as roughnecking in Wyoming were all important in his development into the climber, cinematographer and expedition leader that he became. In High Exposure, David Breashears stands proudly among the growing number of men who have attempted to portray to we laymen the bizarre lifestyle of mountain climbers.
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