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In the Ghost Country: A Lifetime Spent on the Edge
 
 
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In the Ghost Country: A Lifetime Spent on the Edge [Paperback]

Peter Hillary (Author), John Elder (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (36 customer reviews)


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Book Description

July 27, 2007

A memoir of extraordinary depth and searing honesty, In the Ghost Country is the story of Peter Hillary's physical and emotional journey across the icy wastes of Antarctica. A place where the thoughts and memories of a lifetime were called forth by the blank slate of the Antarctic snows -- so real that the ghosts of lost friends and loved ones walked with him in the white maelstrom.

In the Antarctic summer of 1998-99, Peter Hillary and two companions skied to the South Pole -- each man pulling a 440-pound sled 900 miles across some of the most forbidding country on earth. The plan was to complete the tragic journey of Captain Robert Falcon Scott, to the Pole and back. But under the pressure of a relentless media spotlight, fatal team chemistry, and food and fuel stores, the expedition fragmented into hostile isolation. Instead of completing Scott's journey, they found they were repeating it.

For Peter Hillary, this was the loneliest trek of his life. Estranged from his companions, tortured by the sensory deprivation of "the great white everywhere," Hillary's journey became a hallucinogenic pilgrimage through a country where "he could see the dead and the places of the dead": the ghosts of too many friends who had perished at his side in the mountains; and most powerfully, the ghost of his beloved mother, who it seemed "had turned up on the ice to keep me company."

In the Ghost Country is the story of that trip, a chronicle of profound isolation, grief, and loneliness. It is a meditation on a lifetime spent on the edge. Told here are the tragedies: on Ama Dablam in Nepal, a near perfect climb until its shocking finish with an unexpected death; on Makalu where half the party was wiped out; on Everest where two more were lost, including a great friend; and later on K2, in 1995, where Hillary barely survived the storm that killed seven people.

But here also are the "marvelous times": Growing up in New Zealand, where the family's holiday adventures were turned into documentaries; first seeing Everest at seven years of age; the near-fatal teenage adventures; working on the schools and hospitals that Sir Edmund built for the Nepalese people; traveling with his father and Neil Armstrong to the North Pole; summiting Everest twice.

Informed by a strong literary sensibility, In the Ghost Country is compelling contemplation of adventure and a joyful tribute to "the rapture" of getting "out there" on the edge.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In 1998, explorer-adventurer Hillary (son of Sir Edmund) set off on skis with two ill-chosen companions to retrace the South Pole route that killed Robert Falcon Scott in 1912. Like Scott, Hillary and company hit horrendous barriers. The cold chewed up equipment and ravaged fingers and toes. Storms pinned the team in its tiny, fetid tent. They slowly starved, as the brutal march burned more calories than their bodies could absorb, and Hillary nearly ruptured himself dragging his 400-pound sled of supplies. But the worst torture was mental. The unending white landscape gave everyone a bad case of expeditionary madness, and Hillary got the brunt of it. His teammates began blaming him for their setbacks, and soon excluded him from the smallest social interactions. Alone in a frigid sensory-deprivation tank, Hillary began to hallucinate. Dead friends and relatives tramped with him through imagined landscapes and, with him, revisited the adventures and tragedies of his past. The miserable journey makes a terrific book, as Hillary's visions frame frequent flashbacks to other expeditions and to his New Zealand childhood. The main narrative, written in the third person by journalist Elder, is larded throughout with first-person commentary by Hillary, who is a fine, frank writer. This unusual structure solves the problem of the toneless voice that "as told to" accounts can have, while retaining a sense of intimacy and authenticity. The result is moving and insightful, scraping away the hubris of the adventure-book genre to examine the forces that propel explorers through godforsaken places. Photos.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

David Breashears leader and codirector, Everest IMAX Filming Expedition Peter Hillary's harrowing account of his attempt with two companions to complete Captain Robert Falcon Scott's doomed journey to the South Pole makes for powerful reading. A masterful story of an expedition's precipitous collapse and a study of a life lived on the brink, this is a vivid tale of physical endurance, heartbreaking loneliness, and ultimately the triumph of a man over the cruelty of the Antarctic wasteland and the ghosts of his own past. -- Review --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Free Press (July 27, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0743243706
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743243704
  • Product Dimensions: 6 x 9 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (36 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,462,322 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

36 Reviews
5 star:
 (26)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (4)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (36 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

158 of 158 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Moving, inspiring and very entertaining. What a survivor!, January 23, 2004
It seemed that every five or six pages I'd look up and say to my wife: ``Just listen to this.'' It's a bad habit of mine, and it usually drives her nuts. But with In The Ghost Country, she became as captivated as I did. The relevations are sobering and surprising, the writing is seductive and dreamy, some scenes are almost trippy in their cumulative power. I've seen Peter Hillary as a motivational speaker, and he puts on a pretty good show, with a good sense of humor, but you don't see just how much this man has been through. There's a lot of death in this book (and even dark thoughts of murder), and a lot of wonder and amazement too. But in the end Hillary chooses life, and has made the right choices under the most perilous circumstances to stay alive. He's survived where so many of his friends have not. I actually shed tears when I came to a small scene in part four, where Hillary has inched across the ice shelf and is moving up the glacier. He's been out there for about seven weeks and virtually been alone the whole time because he's estranged from his two team mates and there's only been the company of his ghosts, which is the worst kind of loneliness. On the glacier, at minus-20 degrees, he finds a tiny patch of algae miraculously growing on a rock. He writes: ``That is was so beautiful to behold had everything to do with place and time, where it was, where we were, how long it had been, how long it had been since we'd seen something fresh and green... it was like we'd discovered life on Mars.'' I suspect for Hillary it was like an affirmation of hope and a reminder to just keep going. After sharing his journeys through seven kinds of hell, I found it very moving and weird to say but a kind of consolation for my own lonely moments in the dark. We all have them.
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143 of 144 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars More to it than cutting the rope, January 30, 2004
By 
"iknownothing3" (Vancouver, Canada) - See all my reviews
Just like Joe Simpson's Touching The Void, this book will probably become controversial and well known because of a rope-cutting incident where a climber is released to oblivion. Reviewers aren't supposed to spill the beans and spoil it for other readers, so I'll just say it makes one hell of a story. But Hillary's book is full of great stories, and the glue that holds them all together is his strung-out search for comfort and meaning on his lonely trek to the south pole. The joy for me was finding depth and revelation in each rollicking or harrowing episode. My one quibble is that there is no index. It doesn't detract from the big read, but it would have been useful when I was going back through the book, to re-read various passages. Hence I've gone against the grain and docked it a star.
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158 of 160 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Journey to the centre of the soul, January 22, 2004
By 
joe h (Hoboken, NJ, USA) - See all my reviews
If you love a good old-fashioned gut-spill, especially by somebody with a famous name, then you'll love this book, too. It reads like you are walking through a very strange and colorful and often violent dream. Through a series of recollections in the form of hauntings, famous son Peter Hillary shares the very-high highs and the brutal lows of an extraordinary restless life. And thankfully he does it with a stoic and often very black humor, without losing respect for the people he's mourning. He admits there is a big cost in devoting your life to adventure, and one of them being cursed with a ruthless selfishness, yet in the end these almost psychedelic memoirs are a tribute to other people. It's not all about him. I also enjoyed the pacy, very tight and clever re-telling of Scott's last journey and Shackleton's wild times, as well some fascinating comparisons with other modern polar journeys that went to hell. And i love the fact that the opening two sentences make a limerick!
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
Captain Scott was an absentee, officially buried at sea. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
beautiful sparkling day, deep sub zero, little red tent, jolly good stuff, blurred smudges, adventure clothes, polar trip, dead diaries, bleached rags, accident inspector, polar travel, ghost country, crevasse fields, fourth presence, pee bottle, coated tongue, familiar fear, white everywhere, death zone, black beach
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Peter Hillary, South Pole, Jon Muir, Scott Base, Base Camp, New Zealand, Eric Philips, Jeff Lakes, Old Firm, Camp Two, Captain Scott, White Island, Kim Logan, Peter Mulgrew, Polar Plateau, Mike Rheinberger, Shackleton Glacier, Sir Edmund, Craig Nottle, Matuki Valley, Mount Everest, North Pole, Mike Stroud, Observation Hill, Southern Alps
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