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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Mountaineering Story, December 7, 2007
This review is from: A Walk in the Sky: Climbing Hidden Peak (Hardcover)
It was refreshing to read a good story of the first ascent of Hidden Peak in 1958. This was before the Himalayas were deluged by eco-tourists and before numerous sensationalist accounts of conquest written or filmed. Here is a story of some American mountaineers scraping together an expedition to enjyoy a climb of an 8,000 meter peak. How much better can it get? Perhaps the author "sanitized" the account since it is devoid of personality and ego conflicts. Everyone in the book is a happy camper: sahibs, HAPs and porters.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A biased reader, January 2, 2007
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This review is from: A Walk in the Sky: Climbing Hidden Peak (Hardcover)
Since I know the author I am of course biased in his favor. But as he makes (favorable) mention of me in the book that gives him top rating of 5 stars.

Actually, it's a darn fine book. I've been reading mountaineering literature for quite some time now and am struck by evolution of style over the years. Books of the 1920s and 30s now seem "detached." We learn from them what people DID, but not a lot about who the people WERE. (Tilman is a great and welcome exception.) Through his humor--often self-deprecating--Clinch's story makes it plain that mountaineers can accomplish great things while still enjoying themselves. Probably as a reflection of what the publishers know will sell, more recent books (and especially TV movies and the like) place so much emphasis on danger, harum-scarum and disaster that a general reader (who can't see between the lines) must get a very peculiar slant on climbing.

Read it!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Walk and Talk, July 25, 2010
This review is from: A Walk in the Sky: Climbing Hidden Peak (Hardcover)
This book surprised me. It's a pearl. I judge mountaineering books by how many thoughtful quotations I can glean from the pages on a variety of topics and insights. It's a nice title, the walking, but I liked the talking. Here is an example:

"Expeditions are born in the minds of men and more of them die there than are defeated by avalanches, bad weather, and misfortune combined." Nicholas Clinch.
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A Walk in the Sky: Climbing Hidden Peak
A Walk in the Sky: Climbing Hidden Peak by Nicholas Clinch (Hardcover - Dec. 1982)
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