Sunday, November 30, 2008
Q2 Post 3
In chapters 5 and 6 of Into Thin Air the group travels up to the 17,000 ft base camp. Within a few days after arriving, some of the members of Krakuer's group get sick. Krakauer gets altitude sickness himself and is worried. He talks to Rob Hall, the guide, about it and how he feels he doesn't have enough experience to climb. Hall says not to worry about it and that it doesn't take much experience, and from this I think more that Hall is more reckless and thinks he can do anything or guide anyone to the top of the tallest mountain. Krakauer also introduces the legendary Scott Fischer. Fischer was another guide guiding a different group on the same dates, and he knew Hall well. Hall had beat out Fischer's offer to Outside magazine, the magazine Krakauer wrote for and who was sponsoring his trip, to send Krakauer on their trip, but that didn't cause any hard feelings betwixt any of the three men. Krakauer tells of Fischers incredible strength and drive. He was always known for his endurance and his ability to ignore pain and continue up the mountain. When Fischer worked at NOLS, he worked out so hard in the gym everyday that he would throw up after every work out. He has also been know as a survivor. He has fallen 70 and 100 feet to the ground and got up virtually unhurt, except on one of these falls an ice axe punctured his calf, and he had a clean hole there for several months until it healed, but he still had a massive scar there he showed Krakauer. Even so, that type of injury isn't too bad, considering that he should've died on each fall. Its events like these that cemented Fischer's status as a legend.
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Q2 Post 2
I read chapters 3 and 4 for my second blog. During these two chapters Krakauer tells more of his preparations for the trip, and tells of the very beginning of his journey and the main characters on joining him on his journey. The author introduces the main guide from his trip, New Zealander Rob Hall. Over the course of the past two chapters he has become my favorite member of the group. He has completed the "seven summits in seven months" challenge, which is climbing the tallest mountain on every continent in seven months. Hall is admirable to me because of all his experience as well as his personality. I really enjoyed a passage when he laughs at his own joke. "Launching into a story involving a French tourist, a Buddhist monk, and a particularly shaggy yak, Hall delivered the punch line with an impish squint, paused a beat for the effect, then threw his head back in a booming, contagious laugh, unable to contain his delight for his own yarn. I liked him immediately" (p. 31). I also feel I would've liked Hall immediately given the description by Krakauer. I like the fact that he can laugh at his own jokes, even when the others didn't. He seemed to be a person secure of himself, an admirable trait in my opinion. What is upsetting to me, however, is that I already know Hall will die in the end. Its part of Krakauer's journalistic writing style that I am going to have to deal with throughout the rest of the book.
Monday, November 17, 2008
Q2 Outside Reading Post 1
For my second quarter outside reading I am reading Into Thin Air by Jon Krakauer. Its the story of the author's disastrous experience climbing Mount Everest. I choose to read it because last quarter I read Into the Wild which is also by Krakauer and I really liked it. Its the story of Chris McCandless, the young man who gave up a comfortable future to live off the land in Alaska. I read the first two chapters of Into Thin Air, and they tell the reader right away what happens on the trip: Five of the climbers in Krakauer's group die, and others get severely frostbitten and get amputated. In the beginning of Into the Wild, Krakauer also tells what happens in the end of the book: the main character dies. I think this is Krakauer's style of writing, and it comes from his journalistic back round. His books are not so much a story as a analysis of a story. Another similarity betwixt the two books is that they both have side stories to support the main story. In Into Thin Air he writes about the discovery of Everest being the tallest mountain in the world, the first expeditions to summit it, and his past climbing stories. In Into the Wild Krakauer writes about various other idealistic young men and their stories, including a rope-less rock climber from the twenties and a crazy hippie who tried living like a neanderthal with no modern tools or technology. From my observations thus far, I believe I will be finding more similarities between the two novels.
Thursday, November 13, 2008
ATPH POV
I think that Cm changes the pov just to switch things up a bit. He wants to try having the book be centered around Rawlins for a little bit. For once in the book we can compare Rawlins' inner thoughts to John's. This is done at this time in the novel because Rawlins is getting beat up because of John's actions. It is interesting to see the effects of his actions and good to see it from Rawlins' pov because he is the effected person. It is the first major really bad thing that has happened to them, so wee need to see this event from every angle.
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