Into Thin Air (2 page)

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Authors: Jon Krakauer

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BOOK: Into Thin Air
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INTRODUCTION
In March 1996,
Outside
magazine sent me to Nepal to participate in, and write about, a guided ascent of Mount Everest. I went as one of eight clients on an expedition led by a well-known guide from New Zealand named Rob Hall. On May 10 I arrived on top of the mountain, but the summit came at a terrible cost.
Among my five teammates who reached the top, four, including Hall, perished in a rogue storm that blew in without warning while we were still high on the peak. By the time I’d descended to Base Camp nine climbers from four expeditions were dead, and three more lives would be lost before the month was out.
The expedition left me badly shaken, and the article was difficult to write. Nevertheless, five weeks after I returned from Nepal I delivered a manuscript to
Outside
, and it was published in the September issue of the magazine. Upon its completion I attempted to put Everest out of my mind and get on with my life, but that turned out to be impossible. Through a fog of messy emotions, I continued trying to make sense of what had happened up there, and I obsessively mulled the circumstances of my companions’ deaths.
The
Outside
piece was as accurate as I could make it under the circumstances, but my deadline had been unforgiving, the sequence of events had been frustratingly complex, and the memories of the survivors had been badly distorted by exhaustion, oxygen depletion, and shock. At one point during my research I asked three other people to recount an incident all four of us had witnessed high on the mountain, and none of us could agree on such crucial facts as the time, what had been said, or even who had been present. Within days after the
Outside
article went to press, I discovered that a few of the details I’d reported were in error. Most were minor inaccuracies of the sort that inevitably creep into works of deadline journalism, but one of my blunders was in no sense minor, and it had a devastating impact on the friends and family of one of the victims.
Only slightly less disconcerting than the article’s factual errors was the material that necessarily had to be omitted for lack of space. Mark Bryant, the editor of
Outside
, and Larry Burke, the publisher, had given me an extraordinary amount of room to tell the story: they ran the piece at 17,000 words—four or five times as long as a typical magazine feature. Even so, I felt that it was much too abbreviated to do justice to the tragedy. The Everest climb had rocked my life to its core, and it became desperately important for me to record the events in complete detail, unconstrained by a limited number of column inches. This book is the fruit of that compulsion.
The staggering unreliability of the human mind at high altitude made the research problematic. To avoid relying excessively on my own perceptions, I interviewed most of the protagonists at great length and on multiple occasions. When possible I also corroborated details with radio logs maintained by people at Base Camp, where clear thought wasn’t in such short supply. Readers familiar with the
Outside
article may notice discrepancies between certain details (primarily matters of time) reported in the magazine and those reported in the book; the revisions reflect new information that has come to light since publication of the magazine piece.
Several authors and editors I respect counseled me not to write the book as quickly as I did; they urged me to wait two or three years and put some distance between me and the expedition in order to gain some crucial perspective. Their advice was sounds, but in the end I ignored it—mostly because what happened on the mountain was gnawing my guts out. I thought that writing the book might purge Everest from my life.
It hasn’t, of course. Moreover, I agree that readers are often poorly served when an author writes as an act of catharsis, as I have done here. But I hoped something would be gained by spilling my soul in the calamity’s immediate aftermath, in the roil and torment of the moment. I wanted my account to have a raw, ruthless sort of honesty that seemed in danger of leaching away with the passage of time and the dissipation of anguish.
Some of the same people who warned me against writing hastily had also cautioned me against going to Everest in the first place. There were many, many fine reasons not to go, but attempting to climb Everest is an intrinsically irrational act—a triumph of desire over sensibility. Any person who would seriously consider it is almost by definition beyond the sway of reasoned argument.
The plain truth is that I knew better but went to Everest anyway. And in doing so I was a party to the death of good people, which is something that is apt to remain on my conscience for a very long time.
Jon Krakauer

 

Seattle

 

November 1996
DRAMATIS PERSONAE

 

Mount Everest Spring 1996
*

 

 

 

Adventure Consultants Guided Expedition

 

Rob Hall
New Zealand, leader and head guide

 

Mike Groom
Australia, guide

 

Andy “Harold” Harris
New Zealand, guide

 

Helen Wilton
New Zealand, Base Camp manager

 

Dr. Caroline Mackenzie
New Zealand, Base Camp doctor

 

Ang Tshering Sherpa
Nepal, Base Camp sirdar

 

Ang Dorje Sherpa
Nepal, climbing sirdar

 

Lhakpa Chhiri Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Kami Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Tenzing Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Arita Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Ngawang Norbu Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Chuldum Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Chhongba Sherpa
Nepal, Base Camp cook

 

Pemba Sherpa
Nepal, Base Camp Sherpa

 

Tendi Sherpa
Nepal, cook boy

 

Doug Hansen
USA, client

 

Dr. Seaborn Beck Weathers
USA, client

 

Yasuko Namba
Japan, client

 

Dr. Stuart Hutchison
Canada, client

 

Frank Fischbeck
Hong Kong, client

 

Lou Kasischke
USA, client

 

Dr. John Taske
Australia, client

 

Jon Krakauer
USA, client and journalist

 

Susan Allen
Australia, trekker

 

Nancy Hutchison
Canada, trekker

 

Mountain Madness Guided Expedition

 

Scott Fischer
USA, leader and head guide

 

Anatoli Boukreev
Russia, guide

 

Neal Beidleman
USA, guide

 

Dr. Ingrid Hunt
USA, Base Camp manager, team doctor

 

Lopsang Jangbu Sherpa
Nepal, climbing sirdar

 

Ngima Kale Sherpa
Nepal, Base Camp sirdar

 

Ngawang Topche Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Tashi Tshering Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Ngawang Dorje Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Ngawang Sya Kya Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Ngawang Tendi Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Tendi Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

“Big” Pemba Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Jeta Sherpa
Nepal, Base Camp Sherpa

 

Pemba Sherpa
Nepal, Base Camp cook boy

 

Sandy Hill Pittman
USA, client and journalist

 

Charlotte Fox
USA, client

 

Tim Madsen
USA, client

 

Pete Schoening
USA, client

 

Klev Schoening
USA, client

 

Lene Gammelgaard
Denmark, client

 

Martin Adams
USA, client

 

Dr. Dale Kruse
USA, client

 

Jane Bromet
USA, journalist

 

MacGillivray Freeman IMAX/IWERKS Expedition

 

David Breashears
USA, leader and film director

 

Jamling Norgay Sherpa
India, deputy leader and film talent

 

Ed Viesturs
USA, climber and film talent

 

Araceli Segarra
Spain, climber and film talent

 

Sumiyo Tsuzuki
Japan, climber and film talent

 

Robert Schauer
Austria, climber and cinematographer

 

Paula Barton Viesturs
USA, Base Camp manager

 

Audrey Salkeld
U.K., journalist

 

Liz Cohen
USA, film production manager

 

Liesl Clark
USA, film producer and writer

 

Wongchu Sherpa
Nepal, sirdar

 

Jangbu Sherpa
Nepal, lead camera Sherpa

 

Taiwanese National Expedition

 

“Makalu” Gau Ming-Ho
Taiwan, leader

 

Chen Yu-Nan
Taiwan, climber

 

Kao Tien Tzu
Taiwan, climber

 

Chang Jung Chang
Taiwan, climber

 

Hsieh Tzu Sheng
Taiwan, climber

 

Chhiring Sherpa
Nepal, sirdar

 

Kami Dorje Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Ngima Gombu Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Mingma Tshering Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Tenzing Nuri Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Dorje Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Pasang Tamang
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Ki Kami Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Johannesburg
Sunday Times
Expedition

 

Ian Woodall
U.K., leader

 

Bruce Herrod
U.K., deputy leader and photographer

 

Cathy O’Dowd
South Africa, climber

 

Deshun Deysel
South Africa, climber

 

Edmund February
South Africa, climber

 

Andy de Klerk
South Africa, climber

 

Andy Hackland
South Africa, climber

 

Ken Woodall
South Africa, climber

 

Tierry Renard
France, climber

 

Ken Owen
South Africa, journalist and trekker

 

Philip Woodall
U.K., Base Camp manager

 

Alexandrine Gaudin
France, administrative assistant

 

Dr. Charlotte Noble
South Africa, team doctor

 

Ken Vernon
Australia, journalist

 

Richard Shorey
South Africa, photographer

 

Patrick Conroy
South Africa, radio journalist

 

Ang Dorje Sherpa
Nepal, climbing sirdar

 

Pemba Tendi Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Jangbu Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Ang Babu Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Dawa Sherpa
Nepal, climbing Sherpa

 

Alpine Ascents International Guided Expedition

 

Todd Burleson
USA, leader and guide

 

Pete Athans
USA, guide

 

Jim Williams
USA, guide

 

Dr. Ken Kamler
USA, client and team doctor

 

Charles Corfield
USA, client

 

Becky Johnston
USA, trekker and screenwriter

 

International Commercial Expedition

 

Mal Duff
U.K., leader

 

Mike Trueman
Hong Kong, deputy leader

 

Michael Burns
U.K., Base Camp manager

 

Dr. Henrik Jessen Hansen
Denmark, expedition doctor

 

Veikka Gustafsson
Finland, climber

 

Kim Sejberg
Denmark, climber

 

Ginge Fullen
U.K., climber

 

Jaakko Kurvinen
Finland, climber

 

Euan Duncan
U.K., climber

 

Himalayan Guides Commercial Expedition

 

Henry Todd
U.K., leader

 

Mark Pfetzer
USA, climber

 

Ray Door
USA, climber

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