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We鈥檝e put together a list of articles, books, and films that dive into the captivating events that have played out on Mount Everest over the years. (Photo: Daniel Prudek/iStock/Getty)

Our Favorite Books and Movies About Mount Everest

At the end of one of the most successful Everest seasons in years, we collected the most compelling stories about the peak and how it can bring out the best and worst in those who attempt to climb it

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(Photo: Daniel Prudek/iStock/Getty)

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It鈥檚 been quite an Everest climbing season, with nearly 700 summits, thanks to some of the best weather windows in years. Even for those of us who will never set foot in Nepal, the mountain, also known as Chomolungma in Tibetan and Sagarmatha in Nepalese, is an alluring place, perhaps due to its ability to bring out both the very best and very worst of the human spirit. There are stories that make you lose hope, like reading about mountaineers on their way to the top stepping over fellow climbers who lie dying聽along the same route. And others that are incredibly inspiring, like the news just last month of the聽first all-Black expedition聽to make it to the summit.

We鈥檝e put together a list of articles,聽books, and films that dive into the captivating events that have played out on the world鈥檚 tallest peak over the years, from historic ascents to tense mountain politics and tragic disasters. We hope they鈥檒l hold you over until next season.

The Best Articles and Books About Everest:

The Disposable Man: A Western History of Sherpas on Everest,鈥 by Grayson Schaffer (2013)

The summit dreams of the hundreds of paying clients who flock to Everest Base Camp every spring are typically supported by teams of Sherpas, a local ethnic group known for their prowess at altitude. They guide climbers, shuttle loads for expeditions, set fixed lines, and work as cooks. There鈥檚 a surplus of lucrative gigs to be had for Sherpas on Everest, especially in comparison to what鈥檚 available in the rest of the country, and a season on the peak can often sustain a family for the better part of the year. But it鈥檚 a dangerous聽profession. In 2013, former 国产吃瓜黑料 editor Grayson Schaffer explored the working conditions on Everest, what happens when Sherpas die in the mountains, and where a death leaves a Sherpa鈥檚 family. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no other service industry in the world that so frequently kills and maims its workers for the benefit of paying clients,鈥 he writes. 鈥淎 Sherpa working above Base Camp on Everest is nearly ten times more likely to die than a commercial fisherman鈥攖he profession the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention rates as the most dangerous nonmilitary job in the U.S.鈥攁nd more than three and a half times as likely to perish than an infantryman during the first four years of the Iraq war.鈥 The story is a necessary read to understand what happens behind the scenes to make Everest expeditions鈥攁nd summits鈥攑ossible for so many.

, by Jon Krakauer (1997)

(Photo: Courtesy Anchor)

In March 1996,聽国产吃瓜黑料 sent journalist and mountaineer Jon Krakauer to join a guided expedition on Everest. With his feet planted on the summit, Krakauer didn鈥檛 see anything that 鈥渟uggested that a murderous storm was bearing down,鈥 but that鈥檚 exactly what happened. Of the five people from his team who summited that day, four died on their way down, caught in the blizzard聽high on the mountain. When Krakauer got back to Base Camp, he learned that five climbers from other expeditions also perished. Into Thin Air recounts what happened that day, informed by both Krakauer鈥檚 firsthand account and his investigative reporting. More than 20 years later, it鈥檚 still a riveting read鈥攁ny similar list without this classic book is missing an integral piece of mountain history.

, by Jamling Tenzing Norgay (2001)

(Photo: Courtesy HarperOne)

Author and climber Jamling Tenzing Norgay is the son of the legendary Tenzing Norgay, who made the first ascent of Mount Everest in 1953 with Sir Edmund Hillary. The elder Norgay told his son that he 鈥渃limbed Everest so that you wouldn鈥檛 have to,鈥 but Jamling was still drawn to the peak. He made his first summit on David Breashears鈥檚 expedition in 1996, which was turned into the Everest Imax movie (see below). That same season the events of Into Thin Air took place, and Touching my Father鈥檚 Soul offers its own account of the tragic day. It also chronicles Jamling鈥檚 father鈥檚 life and relationship with Hillary, a man revered by many, and it takes a larger look at the mountain through the lens of a Sherpa, providing an important perspective and one different from what we usually get from Western-dominated Everest literature.

, by Mark Synnott (2021)

(Photo: Courtesy Dutton)

A professional climber, guide, and writer, Mark Synnott was drawn to Everest in the spring of 2019 to investigate the 1924 expedition of George Mallory and Sandy Irvine, who were last seen some 800 feet from the summit while ascending the Northeast Ridge. Was it possible that they were the first people to reach the summit of Everest? Mallory鈥檚 body was found in 1999, but Irvine鈥檚 had never been located. And it was Irvine who鈥檇 carried a Kodak camera that could provide the evidence needed to answer this decades-old question. In The Third Pole, we get a look at the mountain as a whole and at the 1924 expedition, while also learning the story of Synnott鈥檚 own mission to reach the top in search of Irvine and his camera.

, by Ed Caesar (2020)

(Photo: Courtesy Avid Reader Press)

In 1934, Maurice Wilson, a soldier from the UK, had a wild idea: fly a plane from England to the slopes of Mount Everest and then make a solo ascent of the peak. The most unbelievable part of this grand goal was that Wilson wasn鈥檛 a pilot or a climber, and no one聽had ever summited Everest at that time. New Yorker writer Ed Caesar tells the story of Wilson鈥檚 journey and the endless hurdles he overcame:聽learning to fly, getting his plane seized, illegally sneaking into Tibet, and walking hundreds of miles to the start of the climb. Caesar鈥檚 diligent research brings to life Wilson鈥檚 remarkable attempt to make his big dream come true.

, by Sharon Wood (2019)

(Photo: Courtesy Mountaineers Books)

In 1986, Sharon Wood, a 29-year-old Canadian mountain guide, became the first North American woman to summit Everest via the rarely climbed West Ridge (a route that has yet to be repeated). In Rising, Wood talks about the climb itself and the fanfare that followed, as well as the 鈥渁ccidental career鈥 as a motivational speaker that resulted from it. She also chronicles the mundane details and smaller moments of expedition life that we don鈥檛 often read about (and some not-so-mundane ones, like how her ex-boyfriend鈥檚 new girlfriend was her main competitor vying for the title of first North American woman to stand atop Everest). Wood analyzes what it is to be a woman on a male-dominated team, and questions where her own motivation to climb mountains comes from. 鈥淓verest wanted this book to be about it,鈥 Wood writes. 鈥淏ut the mountain merely serves as a stage and a timeline for the real story.鈥

, by Nick Heil (2009)

(Photo: Courtesy Virgin Books )

Former 国产吃瓜黑料 editor Nick Heil drops us into the 2006 Everest climbing season, which saw 11 deaths. He chronicles and juxtaposes the fates of two climbers, David Sharp and Lincoln Hall, to tell the story. Sharp was making his third attempt to climb the mountain solo and became famous for a tragic reason: dozens of climbers passed by him on their way to the summit as he lay dying. Heil wonders: Could he have survived if someone had stopped to help? Hall was also left high on the mountain, alone and dying, but unlike Sharp, he survived a night without supplemental聽oxygen and was rescued the next morning by another team en route to the top. Heil weaves both men鈥檚 stories together in a compelling manner while also investigating the factors that contributed to their deaths: the commercialization of climbing on Everest and the ethics of expeditions on the world鈥檚 high peaks.

The Best Movies About Everest:

Sherpa (2015)

Sherpa was filmed on Everest in 2014, the year an avalanche killed 16 people in the Khumbu Icefall (most of them Sherpas). The crew captured the disaster as well as the ensuing conflict between the Sherpas, foreign expeditions, and Nepalese government about wages, compensation for the victim鈥檚 families, and safety on the mountain. During the course of the movie, we get to know Phurba Tashi, who鈥檚 climbed Everest 21 times and who, in 2014, aimed to climb it twice in one season to set a new record. If you鈥檙e going to watch Sherpa, be sure to also read 鈥Everest鈥檚 Darkest Year,鈥 another 国产吃瓜黑料聽feature by Grayson Schaffer, about the accident and what unfolded in the wake of that tragedy.

Everest: Imax听(1998)

David Breashears was on Everest in 1996 with Jamling Tenzing Norgay and, like Krakauer, captured the moments when tragedy struck. Everest is a 45-minute documentary that offers stunning footage of the peak (including a 360-degree view from the summit). The film, narrated by actor Liam Neeson, gives audiences insight into what it takes to climb the world鈥檚 tallest peak, from the training and preparation to the physical and mental challenges of attempting the ascent. It also follows a team led by the legendary mountaineer Ed Viesturs through the blizzard that killed eight climbers and on to their eventual successful summit.

Beyond the Edge (2014)

This film chronicles the first confirmed ascent of Everest by Norgay and Hillary in 1953, which catapulted them to fame and inspired generations of climbers to follow. In the midst of a modern Everest season, where a colorful circus of tents sprawl at the base of the mountain, it鈥檚 particularly interesting to go back to a time when no one had yet stood atop the peak. Through photographs, archival footage and audio, and reenactments, we get to know the two men and learn what it took to summit Everest for the first time.

Lead Photo: Daniel Prudek/iStock/Getty

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