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Eiger Direct

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London, Collins, 1966, 8vo t.tela sovr. ill. col. pp. 183 con tav. fot. f.t. Neate, 314.

183 pages, Hardcover

First published January 19, 1970

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Robin .
2 reviews
May 13, 2021
A Classic That Stands The Test Of Time

I first read this book as a late teenager an embarrassingly long time ago. I'd wanted to re-read it since but it had become difficult to find. Once I saw that it was now available for Kindle i jumped on it.

To me it still holds up. While it's less detailed than I remember, and it's entirely possible it has amalgamated in my memory with accounts of the climb I had read from Haston and Bonnington themselves, still grips one with the excitement, tension, and horror of the climb. Gillman's journalistic bent for storytelling makes this an accessible read for those unaccustomed to mountaineering terminology while remaining just as interesting for us "armchair mountaineers." He's gone on to write a more detailed book, " Extreme Eiger, " about these same events with the benefit of hindsight and with much greater access to the German team's account as well as to the Harlin family. This book, however, is still excellent and a fundamental pillar of the Eiger compendium.
11 reviews
March 10, 2020
Often referred to as a "bare knuckle fight", having been there I can only confirm. This was an epic battle, in which after surviving just about everything nature could throw at them and the loss of John Harlin made their eventual success a land make for alpine climbing. An epic told with reverence and insight.
15 reviews2 followers
January 6, 2023
Brilliant description of a quote mental effort. The 60s British style and politeness makes it all the better
Profile Image for chucklesthescot.
3,000 reviews134 followers
March 19, 2016
John Harlin gathered a climbing team to obtain his greatest goal-a successful climb of the North Face of the Eiger. It would be the first climb of the Direct Route, and they would have to beat a German rival team as well as the elements on the mountain itself. However, tragedy was to strike during the climb, leaving the team and their rivals with a dilemma over continuing.

The conditions and the climb itself sounded like an exercise in torture. The changing weather patterns meaning that progress was slow and energy was being sapped away as they waited to move up. The detail of what they experienced before the tragic death of one of the team was bad enough, but the effect of losing the man was quite heartbreaking.

This was an excellent book about the expedition with the lows and bittersweet conclusion. If you liked Annapurna, you will probably enjoy this book.
15 reviews1 follower
June 23, 2020
Really enjoyed this. 3rd person style was a bit odd, but I get why. It does feel remarkably fresh for a 60 year old event.
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