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High Crimes
- The Fate of Everest in an Age of Greed
- Narrated by: Holter Graham
- Length: 5 hrs and 52 mins
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Publisher's summary
In the years following the publication of Into Thin Air, much has changed on Mount Everest. Among all the books documenting the glorious adventures on 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.
This audiobook will take listeners on a harrowing tour of the criminal underworld on the slopes and peaks of the world's most majestic mountain.
Some of the stories included here are the tragic story of Nils Antezana, a climber who died on Everest after he was abandoned by his guide. Also included is the author's own summit story, as he participated in the Connecticut Everest Expedition, which would never have followed George Dijjmarescu and Lhakpa Sherap to the Himalya 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. Kodas describes many of these experiences and explores the larger issues these stories raise with thriller-like intensity.
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Story
At 28,251 feet, the world's second-tallest mountain, K2 thrusts skyward out of the Karakoram Range of northern Pakistan. Climbers regard it as the ultimate achievement in mountaineering, with good reason. Four times as deadly as Everest, K2 has claimed the lives of seventy-seven climbers since 1954. In August 2008 eleven climbers died in a single thirty-six-hour period on K2–the worst single-event tragedy in the mountain's history and the second-worst in the long chronicle of mountaineering in the Himalaya and Karakoram ranges.
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Almost Makes You Want to Climb K2... Almost
- By JJ on 12-30-15
By: Ed Viesturs, and others
What listeners say about High Crimes
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
- Kelley
- 02-26-08
Unprocessed Pique
I've rated this book 3 stars because I just find the story of Everest absolutely fascinating and 'High Crimes' adds to this narrative in a way that, while sad, is important and convincing. What detracts from the account is the author's use of himself and his fellows as the unsullied center of this less than noble universe. I dislike it when participants in an event hold themselves aloof from judgement. Krakauer's genuine grief and contemplation of his own imperfection is what makes "Into thin air" so compeling and that introspection is completely lacking in this tale.
Journalists may make just as much money from the mountain as guides do after all - what does that do to their own involvement in the mountain's dramas? It would have been a better book had that question been added to the others.
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9 people found this helpful
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- JoAnn
- 02-14-08
Interesting
First, if you have not read "Into Thin Air", you will be baffled by alot of what is in this book. That being said, I found this story very interesting. It is hard to say how much the abridgement cut into explanations of the mountain and climbing in general. If you found "Into Thin Air" interesting, then you will be fascinated by these stories of climbers struggling to climb Everest and failing, often fatally. The part of the book dealing with the problems in Connecticut after the climb is only small part of the book - the majority of the book is about climbing and Everest itself so don't let the "book jacket" explanation keep you away from this book.
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8 people found this helpful
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- Adrian Mercado Gracia
- 02-10-15
Good book, good narration
Meet my expectations although a bit slow at the beginning.
Narratios was good and easy to understand.
Definitively worth it.
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- Anne
- 02-01-20
Why the bizarre musical interludes??
Report on crime on Everest interesting in light of 2019 overcrowding. But bizarre musical interruptions broke the flow of reporting . Truly poor editorial decision.
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- Amazon Customer
- 08-14-17
Yet another interesting side to the Everest story.
I highly recommend this book if you want another point of view about the David Sharpe story, which always intrigued me how 40 people could just walk by this man on their way to the summit while he was dying without so much as a kind word, it is astonishing. I would like to think I wouldn't-do that to a dog. It also told the story of another man left for dead and other high crimes that go on at the mountain unpunished. It is a real eye opener, I especially recommend it to people who want to go climb that mountain. That mountain seems deadly in more ways then one. Suspenseful and excellent narration. I read it all the way through. Also gives you yet another side of the mysterious mountain climbing Sherpas.
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- AP
- 03-02-22
Horrible
This author writes about his experience (which seems terrible but unbelievable) and then researches other "bad" stories to include in his own. Anyone can spin a story to bash people, expeditions, etc., for money. Horribly written, musical interludes (what in the world!) I hate leaving bad reviews but this was just garbage.
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1 person found this helpful
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- R. KANE
- 03-26-22
Eye-rolling
The book follows multiple intervening story lines in a way that clearly (and badly) mimics krakaur’s style. One main story is compelling but the other, the one the author placed himself on a pedestal at the center of, seems petty, alarmist, and hysterical (Alcohol! Prostitutes! Hashish!). His bloviating on the interpersonal he-said-he-said with his guide was tawdry - both the author and his guide seem patently unlikeable. His grousing about who was supposed to pay what and who got stuck tipping the sherpas reads more like a complaint to the BBB than a book. I’ve been so interested in others’ perspectives on the ethics of extreme mountaineering in the face of such tragic disasters but this is a shrill, lurid and slyly xenophobic tale (He talks about Tibetan kids stoning puppies to death like it’s so common, it’s almost not worth remarking upon. And did you know they’re all thieves, liars, and hookers too? This guy knows…) that never delves into the truly fascinating moral issues at the heart of the matter. And what’s with the music between chapters? Narrator seemed fine.
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