Jon Krakauer is looking to fulfill a childhood ambition by finally climbing Mount Everest. After being assigned to write a brief piece about the mountain for Outside magazine, Krakauer manages to convince his bosses to fund a full-fledged expedition to the top. Bold. Krakauer is climbing with Adventure Consultants, a commercial group led by experienced climber Rob Hall. The journalist befriends several members of his group, such as Andy Harris, a guide, and Doug Hansen, a fellow client and postal worker back home.
79) (Simile). "The wind kicked up huge swirling waves of powder snow that washed down the mountain like breaking surf, plastering my clothing with frost." (pg. 125) (Simile).These smilies really compare, and show the reader the harsh conditions the climbers faced everyday. The main paradox in the book is that experience and preparation ultimately means nothing on Mt. Everest. In particular, no one thought that such a tragedy could occur on an expedition guided by Rob Hall, the most celebrated Everest guide dog of the decade.
Mountain climbing is a very tough activity that includes years of training before someone is ready to complete an exhilarating climb. Looking around the world, there are many amazing places to climb. Although two of the most difficult and intense climbs include the Devil’s Thumb in Alaska and Mount Everest, the tallest mountain on earth. “Everest,” by Erik Weihenmayer and “The Devils Thumb,” by Jon Krakauer have some similarities and some differences in terms of the author’s perspective, organization structure, and tone and word choice. As the two authors wrote, they showed their struggles and feats of every situation through words.
Being so high up can cause there to not be enough oxygen for your body and can kill your brain cells. Preparation for climbing takes several months. You can not just immediately climb Everest, you have to progress by climbing smaller mountains and then working your way up. When a person thinks they are ready to climb Mt. Everest I think that the guides at base camp should decide whether or not they are ready to attempt such a big mountain using some kind of physical test. Personally, I would never want to attempt to climb Everest.
Krakauer explains how following the discovery of Everest as the highest mountain in the world, the journey to the top would take the lives of 24 men, the efforts of 15 expeditions and the passage of 101 years before someone would finally reach the summit. This demonstrates how all though the expedition to the top was not easy, and would require the lives of many men, people would not stop trying because that is human nature. Not all people climb Mt. Everest in their lifetime, but most people, if not all, work hard to achieve something or be successful. Whether that success may be in their professional life, their personal life, or anything else, Mt. Everest can symbolize all of it. It symbolizes a journey to success and relates to the theme of humans natural drive and passion to pursue what they want.
For as long as anyone can remember, people have dreamed of reaching the summit of Mt. Everest. During May of 1996, an expedition set out to Nepal to attempt a climb up Mt. Everest. By the end of this expedition to the top of Everest, many climbers lost their lives due to the brutal weather. In Jon Krakauer’s novel Into Thin Air, he takes readers through the story of the expedition, and he talks about the climbers who died. Among the list of the dead was a man named Doug Hansen.
I think the text of climbing the Everest represents the risks of expedition better since the text of what happened after the events of the Horse of Troy tells of some unbelievable risks that we know can’t ever happen in real life. Previously, I told climbers that to the top of the Everest could fall. They could fall on crevasses, that are nothing less and nothing more than a profound break in the glaciers. Cold temperatures may cause hypothermia, because, well, extremely cold temperatures can cause hypothermia, which is a hazard because the brain can’t think correctly and the person that goes through this may not respond to stop it. Going to Tales From The Odyssey, Odysseus and his crew went across a hard tempest that could drown them.
"To the top of the Everest" also shows risks, but not as explicitly as "Tales from the Odyssey. " The two risks shown in this text are: running out of oxygen because, at higher altitudes, the atmosphere gets thinner, leading to low oxygen. Due to this, people need oxygen masks, but these can run out, leading them to asphyxiate and massive ice storms, which block paths and vision. Both texts also have reasons for the exploration. The reason for the exploration in "Tales from the Odyssey" is to return to Ithaca, Odysseus' home, and replenish supplies.
"Everest: To Climb or Not to Climb" is an article by Kelli Stynton that explains why climbing Mount Everest is a massive risk and questions the future fate of the mountain as a tourist attraction. In the article, Stynton presents the idea of whether Everest should remain open for climbers to scale or whether it should be shut down because of the constant loss of human life on the mountain. She uses two specific paragraphs in the section "Closing Time." to contrast the advantages and disadvantages of keeping Mount Everest open to climbers without choosing a side in this debate. Paragraph 16 of the article primarily describes why Mount Everest should be kept open to climbers.
Over the following decades, Mount Everest has been seen as an opportunity for commercialization. You can now pay thousands of dollars for an experienced climber to guide you up the mountain, along with Sherpas to help you carry your things. This has become such a norm that people have lost sight of the real reason they climb the mountain.
Many things could go wrong climbing the highest mountain in the world with an elevation of 29,029 ft. 12 people died climbing Mount Everest. No is responsible for those death. The climbers had chosen to climb the mountain. In the novel it states, “Hall was charging $65,000 a head to guide clients to the top of the world” (Krakauer 35). This shows that a person is willing to pay to go through so much pain, risk and sickness to summit the top of the world.
The first attempt and success to climb Mt. Everest occured in 1953. Since then, almost 4,000 people have been able to scale the mountain, but over 230 people have not been able to climb it successfully. There is a chance of accident or death when climbing this mountain or any dangerous activity. All people should should have the right to rescue services even if they knowingly put themselves at risk because there is always a chance of an accident happening, rangers are there to save people in danger, and there are rescue vehicles being produced to be used in case of an emergency.
Imagine climbing the tallest mountain earth for a sport would or would you not do it. I personally would with years of training. Unfortunately they are try to get rid of the sport because of the deaths that have happened when climbing Mount Everest like when the enormous ice wedge the size of a mansion broke loose and killed 16 people.(source 1.)I think that it should be able to be climb by people who are trained know what to do when an iceberg fell they should have to use all the safety products that are provided an needed by an instructor whos already climb the mountain. In (source 2.)
In fact one of the worst climbing disasters happened recently. In 2014, at least 39 people were killed on Annapurna I. It is now considered as Nepal's worst mountain climbing disaster. The sudden snowstorm caused avalanches that killed the mountain climbers. They were buried under snow and froze to death.
Other than money being spent from rescues, climbers should be trained. In an Informational Articles called " Why Everest?", it states that," They may not be skilled enough. Nobody doubts their strength and fitness, but they may not know enough about mountaineering and the hazards that high altitudes present." Climbers can easily die if they aren 't skilled enough. There are bad weather up at Mount Everest, and so a person cannot survive in the zone for more than two days because of the lack of oxygen and the extreme departures.