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Reviews for Five Big Mountains: A Regular Guy's Guide to Climbing Kilimanjaro, Aconcagua, Vinson, Elbrus, and Orizaba

 Five Big Mountains magazine reviews

The average rating for Five Big Mountains: A Regular Guy's Guide to Climbing Kilimanjaro, Aconcagua, Vinson, Elbrus, and Orizaba based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2020-12-08 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 3 stars Lynne S. Parlier
This brilliant book has inspired me to ski some of the best peaks of North America. The route descriptions are complete and accurate, but it is much more than a guide book. The great photos and history of the sport of ski mountaineering have made it one of my favorite books. Wild Snow is a must read for anyone who dreams about standing on top of a great mountain, and enjoying the thrill of skiing back down. Dancing on the Edge of an Endangered Planet
Review # 2 was written on 2016-01-27 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 3 stars Jonathan Villalobos
Dan Osman was an enigma. A speed-climber without equal, a free-soloist maverick who climbed without ropes, and enjoyed a life on the impossible crags and cliffs of Yosemite. His final months were spent developing the new sport of 'rope jumping': stringing a taut high-line across a ravine, and then hanging a swing from the centre of the high line, with a launch point hundreds of feet up, on a cliff. In Yosemite, the cliffs are so high you can build thousand foot free-fall swings, with the most extreme arc at the full stretch of the rope. But Yosemite National Park has prohibited BASE jumping and other extreme sports including rope-jumping, and practitioners are today involved in a cat and mouse game, to stay away from rangers, while keeping possession of their expensive equipment from law-enforcement. This has unfortunate knock-on effects, and sometimes results in avoidable tragedies. After setting up his final, record-breaking rope-jump, Osman was pulled over for an expired ticket, and spent a short while in jail. On release, Dan returned to the site of the rope-jump to take down the swing and collect his equipment. Deciding to take one last swing for luck, Dan put his harness on and clipped in. But his gear had been exposed to the elements during his incarceration, and was fatally damaged. That was Dan's final jump. Todhunter's book gives the impression of Dan Osman as an innate outlaw. Dan comes across as a fugitive, from the law, from life, and sometimes from the author. Perhaps this is because of the criminalisation of climbers, slackliners and BASE jumpers, but maybe there's something more. Maybe Dan was never an insider, so he had to live on the edge.


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