Amazon.com Review
Walter Bonatti had been scaling mountains for only a few years when, in 1954, he qualified to join an expedition of fellow Italian alpinists making the first ascent of the forbidding Himalayan peak called K2. There, for reasons that are unclear, the 24-year-old ran afoul of senior members of the team, who accused him of turning back before delivering needed oxygen to them below the summit. Accusations and counteraccusations flew, followed by a libel trial from which Bonatti emerged victorious but ostracized. He went on to bag a few peaks, retired from "extreme" climbing in 1965, and became an accomplished explorer and photojournalist, writing memoirs of his earlier expeditions to mountains on nearly every continent that earned a small but devoted following.
In The Mountains of My Life, translator and editor Robert Marshall gathers those scattered accounts of ascents in the Alps, the Patagonian Andes, the Himalayas, and elsewhere. In his commentary, he describes and defends Bonatti's actions on K2, which, he insists, made it possible for the Italian team to reach the summit. The evidence he offers--including photographs--is convincing. For his part, Bonatti writes that all the mountains he has climbed, "with all the trials they brought me, are a precious, living part of myself." His book will be of interest to anyone who shares that passion for the world's high places. --Gregory McNamee
From Booklist
When the world's second-highest mountain, K2, was conquered in 1954, young Italian mountaineer Bonatti was not one of the two men who reached the summit; he did, however, emerge as the most famous member of the expedition. The controversy over his role in the ascent started almost immediately after the climb and reached its peak in the mid-1960s, when he sued the writer of a newspaper article for libel--mostly, it appears, for the opportunity it provided to set out his own version of events. The story of the author's attempts to win recognition for his role in the conquest of K2 constitutes a large part of this memoir, which collects many of his writings about mountaineering. He is an engaging writer, capturing the excitement of mountain climbing like few other writers have done, and Marshall's translation is remarkably graceful. The book, part of the Modern Library Exploration series, is thrilling from start to finish, and among the best of the many recent true-life adventure sagas. David Pitt
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