The journey up Mount Everest is never easy. Climbers risk their lives as they struggle around jagged towers of ice, over snow-covered boulders, and across gaping crevasses. Pete Athans knows these dangers well. He has climbed Mount Everest fourteen times and reached the summit seven times. What is it like to climb the highest mountain on Earth? In this book, you'll follow Pete to the top—and learn about his adventures along the way.
Everyone has probably heard about Mt. Everest, and how it is an amazing accomplishment to climb to the top. Most people are not aware of the preparation, danger, logistics, and team effort necessary to accomplish this significant feat. Tales from the Top of the World describes all of that, and more, by detailing Pete Athans's (Mr. Everest) many journeys up the mountain. Each chapter of the book represents a part of the journey to the summit of Mt. Everest. For every step of the journey, the book includes a narrative description and glorious photographs with informative captions. There is a focus on a related topic--dress, cuisine, high-altitude sickness--that corresponds to the information focused on in the chapter, and there are other sources (maps, charts) that help tell the story. The "Ask Mr. Everest" section allows for further insights on the topic from the expert.
This is
a great book for a wide variety of readers--one can skim through and appreciate the photographs and captions and get a great story and understanding of what is involved; others can read the narrative as well for deeper understanding. This reviewer has read some lengthy books about Mt. Everest and mountain climbing, and still gained new knowledge from this book just from the pictures--"So that's what base camp looks like!" There was well deserved credit given to Sherpas, who are often the key to helping others scale the mountain. The author does not sugar-coat the tough topics--the fatalities, and the pollution/garbage problem associated with climbers. This book is
the perfect example of why certain nonfiction titles should also be recommended to adults: Everyone can learn a lot reading this book. --
VOYA--Journal
"Young mountaineers with a yen to stand atop Mount Everest, if only in their minds, will find this an informative guide to both the climb itself and the almost superhuman effort it requires. Based on the experiences of a man who has tackled the peak 14 times and reached the summit on half as many occasions, the narrative (written by his sister) opens with quick looks at the mountain and the history of its ascension, then takes readers in succession from Base Camp up over the Khumbu Icefall, the Valley of Silence, the evocatively named Death Zone, and on to the final savagely strenuous push. Accompanying plenty of color photos of climbers and rugged slopes, frequent side boxes contain stories of feats and rescues, an 'Ask Mr. Everest' feature, and background material from maps and charts to lists of required gear and types of high-altitude illness. This absorbing account of the increasingly popular climb and its many dangers is capped with notes on recent efforts to clean up the tons of trash left on the mountain and an excellent, age-appropriate resource list." --Booklist
--Journal
"Hundreds of feet taller than its competitor in the altitude stakes, Everest is the epitome of challenge in the climbing world. Here readers are invited to accompany Pete Athans (who has climbed Everest some 14 times and stood on top of the world on 7 different occasions) on the arduous journey from below base camp to the summit. The matter-of-fact text is broken by tales of Athans's personal adventures--a rockfall on the West Ridge, a seracs crash in the Khumbu Icefall, a rescue in the Death Zone among them--and all are decorated with a plethora of color photos. Interspersed with the adventures are information boxes on such diverse topics as what to wear, high-altitude illnesses, and the 'Eight-Thousanders' (all more than 26,247 feet high) to be found in the Himalayas (should you wish just slightly less challenge in your ascent). There are also several 'Ask Mr. Everest' questions for Athans, along with his thoughtful answers. More detailed than Steve Jenkins's handsome The Top of the World: Climbing Mount Everest (Houghton, 1999), on a par with Jonathan Chester's nifty alphabetic approach in The Young Adventurer's Guide to Everest: From Avalanche to Zopkio (Tricycle, 2002), and simpler than Stephen Venables's more detailed To the Top: The Story of Everest (Candlewick, 2003), Athans's colorful work lends a personal touch to a dramatic endeavor, and may lure adventure-lovers high into the thin, cold air." --School Library Journal
--Journal
"A solid introduction to the world's highest mountain has a you-are-there feel.
The Athanses have collaborated in a most fruitful way: Sandra as a narrative Sherpa of sorts and Pete as the raconteur of riveting adventure stories from his 14 attempts, in which he succeeded in summiting a staggering seven times. Sandra has lots of stunning facts to display--the 250 mph gusts of wind, the deadly snowstorms, the killer illnesses that can strike climbers--as well as notorious landscapes to explore: the Khumbu Icefall, the Death Zone, the Hillary Step. And certainly there are important questions to address, from the mountain's name in Tibetan and Nepalese to how one goes to the bathroom when there is no bathroom to go to. It all smoothly gathers, like snowflakes into a glacier, and a bright, dangerous and humbling portrait of Everest/Chomolungma/Sagarmatha takes shape. Pete adds handfuls of colorful episodes, mostly crackerjack moments of mayhem averted, which are made substantive by the many tack-sharp photographs. Local guides and porters are well incorporated into the story, as are regional customs and mountain culture.
A smart, inclusive and evocative account of a mountain, its character and its past." --
Kirkus Reviews--Journal