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Everest: The Road to Base Camp

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Right around the time I started working at 国产吃瓜黑料, the editor Mark Bryant assigned a story that required climbing Mount Everest. The office was always supercharged, but in the weeks leading up to Krakauer鈥檚 May 1996 summit, the intensity at our morning meetings–which were always held in the hallway–ratcheted up 20 notches as we waited for the latest satellite update from Nepal.

Everyone who has read knows how that story ended. Love it or loath it, Krakauer鈥檚 book has become a powerful force in contemporary literature, the standard by which adventure narratives are measured. In addition to being a gripping read, Krakauer鈥檚 book also pushed the mountain further into the mainstream. Suddenly, the mountain's climbers were being scrutinized like Superbowl quarterbacks and everyone, it seemed, had an opinion about the wisdom and ethics of climbing Mount Everest.

As the letters editor during the era (the story first ran at 17,000 words in the ), I read letters of praise and sympathy, letters of vitriol, and letters asking the same question asked of George Mallory almost 100 years ago: “Why climb Everest?”

It took a few years for the mania to subside. I finally decided that unless I raised the cash, acquired the skills, and found the guts to summit Everest myself, I鈥檇 refrain from making a judgment about anyone who did.

Fourteen years later, I still haven鈥檛 found the guts, acquired the skill, or raised the cash to summit Everest–but I am starting starting the trek to Everest Base Camp this week, where I鈥檒l be reporting for Expedition Hanesbrands (), a team led by the Canadian mountaineer , who will be attempting his second summit.

I鈥檒l also be blogging for 国产吃瓜黑料 Online, writing about life at base camp and checking in with the assortment of climbers starting out from the south side, the likes of whom include , a middle linebacker, and , a Washington-based climber attempting a solo speed ascent with no oxygen.

I can鈥檛 deny that I鈥檝e wondered what it would be like to see the view from 29,029 feet. I鈥檝e certainly read about it. After Into Thin Air, I turned to by Walt Unsworth, the biographies of Sir Edmund Hillary and George Mallory, Reinhold Messner鈥檚 , Thomas Hornbein鈥檚 , and by Frank Wells, Dick Bass, and RickRidgeway. Then I read 鈥檚 , which analyzes the 2006 Everest season, the second-most fatal in the mountain鈥檚 history. And, for comic relief, I laughed out loud at Contributing Editor 鈥檚 July 2007 story

As Thomas Hornbein wrote in , his account of the 1963 American Mount Everest Expedition, 鈥淓verest can be an overwhelming experience that is more complex and deeply felt than simply the exposure for several months to discomfort, exhausting effort, uncertainty, and awesome scenery.鈥

If I make it to base camp (a place Fedarko described in 鈥淗igh Times鈥 as, among other things, 鈥渁n absolute fricking blast鈥), I鈥檓 hoping to get a measure of the mountain鈥檚 complexity and grandeur. Then, I鈥檒l pass it on to readers.

–Stephanie Pearson

Photo by Chistopher Herwig

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