Also - discussion of how Everest has been environmentally compromised by all the trips up there now. How the popularity of climbing Everest has added to the danger because the window of opportunity is so small.
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Great details, guys! Thanks so much!
It's also really gripping and a pretty quick read, if that helps!
There's also some discussion of how the sherpas get to the top all the time but never get credit and how guiding idiot climbers has become their main source of income.
It's also really gripping and a pretty quick read, if that helps!
This. I loved it.
It convinced me to never try mountain climbing
And definitely this.
Also, it has a "rich bitch" character that you could be catty about.
There's also the question of whether Krakauer's own presence on the team actually contributed to the fiasco: knowing Outside Magazine was covering the expedition may have led to some faulty decision-making. Because they would get great marketing press out of it! Also, the question of whether the commercialization of mountaineering is a good thing, and the use of all this high-tech equipment. Do we want just any Joe off the street to be able to summit the world's highest mountains? What's that say about exploration, if anyone can do it? Does it negate earlier expeditions without that kind of support?
Also? Nature always wins.
It'd be a great paired reading with Joe Simpson's Touching the Void, which is just as harrowing, and yet in which nobody dies (unbelievable as that is).
I don't like the cold much, and I don't have any interest in summiting any 8,000-meter peaks, but some day I wouldn't mind climbing Mount Whitney, or Mount Shasta...
I did the book talk and several boys wanted the book. Yay and thanks for your help! I gots to read that one, too. It sounds fascinating and scary.
It's Banned Books Week, so get out there and celebrate your freedom to read!
The university is doing some book readings several afternoons from some banned books, and of course the library had their display. I mentioned to some co workers last week (when the article was in the paper) that I really enjoy banned book week. They thought I was crazy. I tried to explain why I liked it -- some people are trying to hide the books, and instead every year it's a celebration of those books and there's more publicity.
The paper said there were 2 challenges this past year at the public library, both over movies. One was the unrated version of In the Cut, which the library decided to remove (they don't normally carry the unrated versions of movies) and the other was Breaking the Waves, which they decided to keep.
I came across a quote that reminded me of the books and decorating discussion.
"I would be the most content if my children grew up to be the kind of people who think decorating consists mostly of building enough bookshelves."
- Anna Quindlen