Minus 148 Degrees: The First Winter Ascent of Mount McKinley

by Art Davidson

Paperback, 1999

Status

Available

Call number

910

Publication

Mountaineers Books (1999), Edition: 3rd, Paperback, 242 pages

Description

"This finely crafted adventure tale runs on adrenaline but also something else: brutal honesty." -The Wall Street Journal "I couldn't lay it down until it was all finished (12:40 a.m. )... A fascinating and beautifully-written story." -Bradford Washburn * One of National Geographic Adventure's "The 100 Greatest Adventure Books of All Time" * Spring 2013 marks the 100th anniversary of the first ascent of Mount McKinley * New edition includes a revised preface, new prologue, and new afterword describing more recent winter attempts on McKinley In 1967, eight men attempted North America's highest summit: Mount McKinley (now known as Denali) had been climbed before--but never in winter. Plagued by doubts and cold, group tension and a crevasse tragedy, the expedition tackled McKinley in minimal hours of daylight and fierce storms. They were trapped at three different camps above 14,000 feet during a six-day blizzard and faced the ultimate low temperature of -148 F. "Minus 148 " is Art Davidson's stunning personal narrative, supplemented by diary excerpts from team members George Wichman, John Edwards, Dave Johnston, and Greg Blomberg. Davidson retells the team's fears and frictions--and ultimate triumph--with an honesty that has made this gripping survival story a mountaineering classic for over 40 years. "Minus 148 " is featured among many best of reading lists, including National Geographic Adventure's "The 100 Greatest Adventure Books of all Time." "At twenty-two I came to regard the first expedition to Mt. McKinley in the winter as a journey into an unexplored land. No one had lived on North America's highest ridges in the winter twilight. No one knew how low the temperatures would drop, or how penetrating the cold would be when the wind blew. For thousands of years McKinley's storms had raged by themselves." --Minus 148 "… (more)

Media reviews

Wall Street Journal
This finely crafted adventure tale runs on adrenaline but also something else: brutal honesty.

User reviews

LibraryThing member ecw0647
It's bad enough to want to get really cold in the summer, but to do it in the winter buggars rational thought. These idiots decided to climb Mt. McKinley in the dead of winter.

Art Davidson was disappointed as a child when he learned that all the continents had been discovered. It's no wonder then
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that he just had to climb McKinley in winter. Many thought it was impossible. Temperatures hovered around -60 and winds often reached 160 mph. Indeed, in December there is only about 4 hours of sunlight; in February around 7 hours.

They had trouble getting a team together, and the climb began badly when one of the members fell to his death in a crevasse. And this was in the first couple of days on the glacier. He was not roped to anyone else, a basic failure in elementary safety rules when walking on glacier ice.

Three of them finally made it to the summit, only to be caught in a blinding wind blizzard on the way back down. Huddled in a snow cave, sharing body heat for barely minimum warmth against rock and snow. Ugh. The only thing that saved them was the discovery of food left in a cache from three years before and some gas one of the climbers remembered he had left behind from a previous climb.

Read this during the summer when it's really hot. I couldn't help but think they might have done better had they prepared more thoroughly. Hard to determine the cause of some of the whining: altitude sickness or personality. Still, a ripping good read.
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LibraryThing member nancynova
A re-publication; an expedition sets out to climb Mt Mckinley (Denali) in Alaska in the winter. Only three of them "summit", then are caught in a storm, the waiting party of four separates after they think the other three surely are dead. In the end all are rescued, although the party lost one man
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in a crevasse early in the climb. This version contains information on what each of the party is doing now, and other winter climbs that have been attempted on the mountain
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LibraryThing member dypaloh
“Altitude was heckling my mind.”

Not nice. But the author and his companions, on an expedition to accomplish the first wintertime ascent of Mt. McKinley, managed to keep their wits when failing would have killed them. Minus 148° is that story.

For the first two-thirds of the book, the author’s
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account of the great difficulties experienced by the expedition is absorbing but also ordinary for this genre. Then, beginning with the chapter titled “March 1: –148°,” on that page and after, the manner of telling and what is told become superb. I would not ask that Art Davidson had done it better.
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LibraryThing member TheSmarch
One of the better mountaineering books I have read from the NatGeo list. Most mountaineering books are full of jargon and descriptions that are incomprehensible to a lay person. This one is told simply but descriptively and the story and progress are easily followed.
LibraryThing member breic
Good, but only average for the genre. The climbers themselves seem a bit lukewarm about the whole thing—not surprising given the grim difficulties and disasters they face. They reach the summit in the dark, where they can't see anything except detritus from other climbers. What's the point?

>
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Sheldon's own on-the-spot description of the storm ran something like: "Yea, I was hucklebuck'n on up there to take a look at ma boys, when I look out the window … Whoa … I seen this ridge just standin' still. I look down at my speedometer and it says 140 miles per hour. Yowza, I had to fly 140 just to keep even with that ol' wind!"
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Language

Original publication date

1969

Physical description

242 p.; 8.24 inches

ISBN

0898866871 / 9780898866872

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