Book Review: Touching the void

  Joe Simpson and his climbing partner, Simon Yates, had just reached the top of a 21,000-foot peak in the Andes when disaster struck. Simpson plunged off the vertical face of an ice ledge, breaking his leg. In the hours that followed, darkness fell and a blizzard raged as Yates tried to lower his friend to safety. Finally, Yates was forced to cut the rope, moments before he would have been pulled to his own death.

That’s how the back cover reads of one of the latest books I finished, Touching The Void. The Touching The Voidbook is written from both the perspective of Simpson & Yates, intertwining the emotions & internal battles each man endured on the mountain following their moment of separation. It’s a gripping tale of adventure, fear, loneliness & the will to never give up.

Following the moment when Yates cut the rope which joined he & Simpson, the real test began. Simpson had fallen into a seemingly bottomless crevasse. Amazingly, he’d landed on a small ledge. Lying in a broken & twisted pile of human wreckage, he managed to lower himself further into the crevasse, reaching a snow shelf, which he used to climb out of the crevasse. The following days found him crawling & dragging himself back to the base camp from where he & Yates had started. Out of food & water, Simpson pushed his body to the brink of exhaustion & death, reaching base camp only hours before Yates left for home.

Touching Void Film 

I thought this book was well written & hard to put down. Joe Simpson describes his ordeal in such a way that puts you in his predicament. Whether or not you’re a climber, you will enjoy this book. The book has also been made into a filmed docudrama. Interviews of Simpson & Yates narrate their tale, as it’s re-enacted on the same mountain that almost took their lives. Here’s a clip of the film from Youtube below.

 

 

                    

~Steve, The Pilgrim.

Deep Southern Caves — National Geographic Magazine

This is just cool! I’ve never been spelunking, but really want to try this one day. It seems both eery & exciting, exploring an unknown & unpredictable region. It’s a different world beneath the surface of earth we all walk on each day. I’ve been to Tennessee & Georgia, hiking the Appalachian Trail, but that’s on top. There’s all kinds of exploration to do below the mountains & trails that most people never think about.  Read the short excerpt below, then click the link for the whole story:

Groaning and clawing, neck twisted, white head scraping against the rock. To cram his body through this basketball-size hole requires yoga-like contortions—arms overhead as if diving, hips uncomfortably twisted the opposite of chest, legs cramped underneath. The Sphincter lies at the end of a kinked, intestinal tunnel, and Marion "the Goat" Smith is the last of our six-person exploratory team to wriggle through, a task he accomplishes with veteran agility and ceaseless cursing.

Cavers can be considered the equivalent of climbers in Yosemite National Park. In the 1960s both groups developed their skills & equipment which catapulted their respective recreations into new realms of difficulty & danger. Neither activity is for the weak of spirit. What caving means to these people can be summed up in these words:  the main thing is to see what no one has ever seen before. To me, that’s true exploration. That’s what a pioneer is, and that’s really cool!

Deep Southern Caves — National Geographic Magazine

Thanks for reading,
The Pilgrim.