Annapurna-Conquest of the First 8000 Metre Peak
Adventure
Annapurna-Conquest of the First 8000 Metre Peak
Maurice Herzog
A friend of mine, an avid
mountaineer and who has summited Mount Everest in 2011, was once relating to me
his experience of climbing Everest. When I repeatedly expressed my awe of
people who have climbed Everest, he brushed aside my sense of amazement saying
that there was not much adventure left in climbing Everest these days. He said
climbing Everest has now become a highly organised tourism industry (for the
host country i.e. Nepal). Before the beginning of climbing season, Sherpas fix
ropes all along the route, right till the peak. Climbing gear, including oxygen
equipment, has improved much since the days of Mallory. All one needs is money,
reasonable fitness and training in mountaineering. Rush of climbers on Everest,
he said in an exasperated voice, further increasing my incredulity, is so
menacing that at times there is a literal queue of mountaineers holding on to
the ropes, clinging to the steep, ice-faced slopes, at heights above eight
thousand metres, waiting for the climbers ahead to hurry up or climb down.
In 1952, the year Maurice Herzog
and his teammate Louis Lachenal climbed Annapurna, things were different. Most
of the Himalayan peaks lay unexplored. No peak above 8000 metres had been
climbed, though some men had reached heights above 8000 metres while attempting
K2 and Everest. Maps available locally were grossly inaccurate, there was no
information about the route for the climb on the mountains and the climbing
equipment was bulky and inadequate, oxygen had yet not been used for climbing.
In this scenario Maurice and his team’s achievement seems stellar. They left
France with an objective of climbing a peak above 8000 metres and were in
favour of Dhaulagiri. But the tiresome and lengthy reconnaissance of the
terrain revealed that this peak was not approachable by any route. They next
surveyed Annapurna from many approaches and decided that it could be scaled. These
explorations had exhausted much of their time, about two months, and when they
started the actual climb the dreaded monsoon was upon their heels.
Herzog has provided a detailed
narrative of their adventure in this book. Audacity of his teammates, their
grit, perseverance, their unfathomable capacity to bear hardships and the nerve-racking
drama of final moments of the climb, especially the avalanche during descent
when monsoon finally caught up with the unfortunate climbers, all these have
been chronicled faithfully. But the book just misses being a great adventure
epic. I think it is because every adventurer doesn’t have the skills of
narration like those of F Scott or the prose style of John Krakauer. Original
book is in French and I have read an English translation. I am aware of many
great works of literature reduced to a piece of ordinary writing because of
shoddy translation. Whatever the reason, the book makes for tedious reading at
many places and the prose repeatedly fails to live up to the heart-stopping
adventure being recounted. A fan of Himalayas and mountaineering will however
have to read this book, if only for the grandiloquence of the feat achieved by
Herzog and his team in 1952.
thanks for sharing the review of this book. I have been looking for a mountaineering related book to read. Will definately get this one now. I agree that inaccurate translation might have ruined the original essence what the author had intented, the story should still remain quite interesting.
ReplyDeleteYou may like to look into Jon Krakauer's Into Thin Air, before you begin this. It is exceedingly well written. It was also the first memoir of an adventure I read. Edmund Hillary's memoir of his Everest climb, High Adventure, is also an joyful read.
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