Beyond possible One man, 14 peaks, and the mountaineering achievement of a lifetime

Nimsdai Purja

Book - 2022

"Nepali climber Nims Purja is the first man ever to summit all fourteen of the world's 8000 meter "Death Zone" peaks. He did so in less than seven months, breaking the previous record of seven years. In this spellbinding memoir, tied to the acclaimed Netflix documentary "14 Peaks," Purja reveals the man behind the climbs, explaining how his early life in Nepal and training as a soldier in Britain's elite Gurkha and SBS units allowed him to achieve a mountaineering mission few thought was attainable"--

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Biographies
Published
Washington, D.C. : National Geographic [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Nimsdai Purja (author)
Physical Description
319 pages, 16 pages of unnumbered plates : color illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781426222535
  • 1. Death or Glory
  • 2. Hope is God
  • 3. Better to Die than to be a Coward
  • 4. The Unrelenting Pursuit of Excellence
  • 5. Into the Death Zone
  • 6. Swimming to the Moon
  • 7. The Mission
  • 8. The Highest Stakes
  • 9. Respect is Earned
  • 10. The Normality of the Extreme
  • 11. Rescue!
  • 12. Into the Dark
  • 13. In Times of Chaos
  • 14. Summit Fever
  • 15. The Politics of a Mountain
  • 16. Quitting's not in the Blood
  • 17. Through the Storm
  • 18. The Savage Mountain
  • 19. A Mountain Mind
  • 20. The People's Project
  • 21. Epic
  • Afterword
  • Appendix 1. Lessons From the Death Zone
  • Appendix 2. Fourteen Mountains: The Schedule
  • Appendix 3. The World Records
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Nepalese climber Purja debuts with a propulsive account of successfully climbing the "Earth's fourteen Death Zone peaks" in record-breaking time. In 2018, after years of serving as a Gurkha soldier in the British military, he embarked on a "wild effort" to reach the pinnacles of the world's 14 tallest mountains in fewer than seven months, an attempt that would "shatter" the previous world record of seven years. With the summits of each rising above 8,000 meters, Purja writes, "the air is so lacking in oxygen that human bodies and brains wither and fail." His exhilarating narrative captures the physical and mental toll he experienced while careening down the sides of mountains and ascending lethally steep slopes in "brutal, whiteout conditions." In addition to recounting topping Everest in Nepal and K2 in Pakistan, Purja writes memorably about his time in the Nepalese regiment of the British Armed Forces, reflecting fondly on a career that both sharpened his skills as a climber--giving him "access to a variety of highly specialized courses"--and deepened the pride he felt around his culture, an aspect of mountaineering that has often gone overlooked. This is a fascinating and inspiring look at a life lived on the edge. (Jan.)

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