Here is narrative nonfiction at its most gripping.
Journalist Jennifer Jordan chronicled the individual
stories of the five courageous women who have climbed
K2, the most fearsome mountain in the world. Climbers
call K2 ''The Savage Mountain.'' It is not quite as tall
as Everest, but it is far more dangerous, located at the
border of China and Pakistan, in the deadly Karakoram
range, which has the harshest climbing conditions and
weather of any place in the world. Ninety women have
climbed Everest, but only five female climbers have ever
reached the summit of K2 alive. Three of these women
died on the way back down the mountain, and the other
two have died since their climb. Because, these five
women, who defeated the most ferocious of all mountains,
have lost their own voices, ''Savage Summit'' told their
tragic and compelling stories. The terror and triumph of
K2 was revealed through the stories of the few women who
have succeeded in climbing it. The women in these
stories are forced to deal with harsh conditions from
the mountain, and from the men climbing around them,
often being treated unfairly or discriminated against in
their struggle to get to the summit.''Savage Summit''
also attempted to answer tough questions: do female
climbers rely too much on their male climbing partners?
Are women prepared for the physiological and emotional
rigors of K2? Are female climbers, because of the
publicity and sponsorship opportunities afforded them,
climbing the mountain without the proper training,
endangering their own lives and the lives of those who
climb with them? And, if women are as capable of men of
climbing this most deadly peak, who will be next to
attempt the long trek to the summit? |
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