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Reviews for Annapurna, a woman's place

 Annapurna magazine reviews

The average rating for Annapurna, a woman's place based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2018-09-15 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 5 stars Stephanie Pappas
That certainly goes down as one of the best climbing books I've read. Even on a simple basis it is a powerful story of a very challenging climb of one of the world's 8000 metre summits. The fact that Arlene had access to fellow climbers diaries allows the narrative to reflect various views. The telling of the tale is simple and effective. The other dimension - the fact that this was an all women team - both adds to the power in places, saddens because of the treatment of female climbers and brings emotion into what is often a rather unemotional area of writing. The treatment of the climbers by the Sherpas, the climbers varying views on how the climb should be approached and Arlene's trials holding together the team and leading the expedition. An excellent read for anyone interested - 4.5/5 and happily rounded up.
Review # 2 was written on 2021-01-30 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars E J Morey
Arlene Blum and her crew of women climbers were the first Americans of any sex to scale the deadly 8,000-meter Himalayan peak of Annapurna in 1978. It was a monumental achievement, to be sure, and this account is a valuable one in the literature of mountaineering, particularly in its fulsome details on the frustrating difficulties of logistical and human-resource management, eg., the cultural and gender clashes between the native Sherpa guides and the Westerners. Also important is its delineation of the outrageous sexism that Blum talks about, mainly at the beginning of the book. In one case a male climber said he was OK with women being on the crew as long as they slept with all the men. Ugh. I remember a time when these attitudes were common, and they didn't even make me flinch, whereas now they are uber-cringe. The book isn't exactly the adrenaline rush provider that many mountaineering books can be, and at times it felt a bit meh and draggy, but its place in the story of mountaineering lit is secure. Any mountaineering fan needs to read it, even though it didn't entirely blow me away.


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