Doctor on Everest: A Memoir of the Ill-Fated 1971 International Everest Expedition

by Peter Steele

Other authorsPat Morrow (Introduction)
Paperback, 2005

Status

Available

Call number

616.02

Publication

Raincoast Books (2005), Edition: First Edition, Paperback, 224 pages

Description

A new release from the author of the national bestseller The Man Who Mapped the Arctic. This enthralling first-hand account tells readers what it's really like to climb Everest-and what happens when things go wrong.A doctor and climber, Peter Steele jumped at the offer to become chief medical officer for the 1971 International Everest Expedition. He didn't expect the series of disasters that included a near-epidemic, a walkout and a grisly death. Dr. Steele tells his story with daring honesty, giving an unparalleled insight into the challenging world of mountaineering."An intensely human book which leaves the ordinary reader with a much more vivid idea of what an attempt on Everest must be like ... The drama, tragedy and high adventure are all there, but taken almost casually in the doctor's long stride." -Daily Telegraph, U.K."Of the many books about Everest published during the past fifty years, Doctor on Everest is the only one to give the uninitiated the exact feeling of what it is like to be on one of these expeditions." -Sunday Times, U.K.… (more)

Media reviews

The Observer Magazine
An invaluable account of men - and one woman - under the extremest pressure in a howling waste and [Steele] makes no bones about the private horror of the experience
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The Sunday Times
The only (book) to give the uninitiated the exact feeling of what it is like to be on one of these expeditions
Daily Telegraph
An intensely human book which leaves the ordinary reader with a much more vivid idea of what an attempt on Everest must be like

User reviews

LibraryThing member stevage
Compared to the other Everest books I've read, this was the least interesting, perhaps because the author's role on the trip was not primarily as mountaineer, or perhaps because it's the most recent (and hence Everest was less a question of "can we climb it" and more "how shall we climb it"). There
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were lots of interesting insights, and a bit more reflection than from the real mountaineers. However, Steele fails a bit to "tell a story" - there's not much suspense, and even the real drama is a bit flat.
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Language

Physical description

224 p.; 9.3 inches

ISBN

1551927659 / 9781551927657

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