Alpine Rising

Sherpas, Baltis, and the Triumph of Local Climbers in the Greater Ranges

  • 272 pages
  • Mountaineers Books
  • 978-1-68051-578-7
  • Feb 20, 2024

Hardback
$29.95
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Description
2024 National Outdoor Book Award Winner

"Alpine Rising is a fascinating history of the crucial and frequently tragic role of local Nepalis, Tibetans, and Pakistanis on mountaineering expeditions to the world’s highest peaks."-- Jon Krakauer

The name of Maurice Herzog, the first man to reach the summit of Annapurna, is widely recognized, but how many know Ang Tharkay, the Sherpa who carried the seriously frostbitten Herzog on his back for miles? Although rarely mentioned in published accounts of early expeditions, local climbers have long been significant members of first ascents on the world’s tallest and most challenging peaks. In Alpine Rising, award-winning writer Bernadette McDonald sets the record straight by shining a light on these too often forgotten heroes.

Now, in the 21st century, it is often local climbers who are setting records. A Nepali team was the first to climb K2 in winter; they reached the summit while singing their national anthem. Pakistani climbers like Little Karim and Ali Sadpara devoted their lives to helping others survive and succeed on and off the mountains and their stories deserve to be more widely known. Not only a timely reminder of the need to recognize the contributions of local climbers and the importance of correcting the historical record, Alpine Rising is a celebration of a region’s local heroes.

Sales benefit the Khumbu Climbing Center (Nepal) and the ASCEND climbing program for girls (Pakistan)

Contributors

Details
  • 272 pages
  • Mountaineers Books
  • 978-1-68051-578-7
  • Feb 20, 2024
Reviews
  • There is a tectonic shift happening in Himalayan mountaineering, and the tragic, happy and funny details from the earliest expeditions to climbing in the age of Instagram are in the pages of Alpine Rising.
    Kunda Dixit, Nepali Times
  • A compulsively readable history of sky-high ventures…. Alpine Rising engages with courageous tales of ambition, triumph, suffering, and, yes, death. It deserves an audience as great as the mountaineering feats it celebrates.
    Steven Threndyle, Literary Review of Canada
  • In our climbs, communities and coverage, McDonald’s Alpine Rising helps us orient amid storms, altitude, inequities and grief.
    Nathan Conroy, Alpinist
  • A future classic
    Michael Levy, Summit Journal
  • McDonald lays bare the truth and doesn’t mince words, just as this subject matter demands…. At times painful, even infuriating, on other pages Alpine Rising is hilarious, sharp witted, tender, deeply insightful, and always, absolutely timely.
    Lynn Martel, Gripped
  • Thoroughly researched, Alpine Rising: Sherpas, Baltis and the Triumph of Local Climbers in the Greater Ranges fills in some crucial gaps in mountaineering history. The enthusiasm, passion, and genuine care for these men and women is palpable on every page. The book is a succession of exciting stories of true adventure.
    Angela Benavides, ExplorersWeb
  • Alpine Rising is a fascinating history of the crucial and frequently tragic role of local Nepalis, Tibetans, and Pakistanis on mountaineering expeditions to the world’s highest peaks. Bernadette McDonald sheds new light on the Himalayan and Karakoram villagers exploited for decades by Western climbers, who often seemed to regard them as little more than expendable servants and laborers. This important, engaging book explains how men and women from these underappreciated communities have recently won worldwide respect and admiration as cutting-edge alpinists, heroic climbing guides, successful entrepreneurs, and masters of their own destinies.
    Jon Krakauer
  • It’s taken far too long, but at last the local guides and porters who have contributed so much to Himalayan climbing for more than a century are having their achievements acknowledged more fully, along with the terrible human cost they suffered along the way. Bernadette McDonald tells this extraordinary story with great energy and understanding, making space not just for the famous Sherpas but other ethnic groups who are also overlooked.
    Ed Douglas, author of Himalaya: A Human History
  • The history of local climbers in Pakistan and Nepal is so robust and nuanced that rarely has anyone endeavored to tell it. Alpine Rising shares these often-overlooked stories of high-altitude workers with direct interviews, historical context, and modern perspective. It should be essential reading for anyone who has wondered how these mountains are climbed and, as importantly, why.
    Melissa Arnot Reid, mountain guide and co-founder, The Juniper Fund
  • We Pakistani climbers are grateful for this important book about us, the unsung heroes of Pakistan. We are the new generation and we are ready for new challenges and our rightful place in climbing history. Alpine Rising shares our story.
    Sajid Sadpara, Balti mountain guide
  • This book is a fascinating and important account of what could very well be the last generation of Sherpa guides in Nepal.
    Dawa Yangzum Sherpa, first female IFMGA-certified mountain guide from Nepal
  • Giving voice to local climbers from Tibet, Pakistan, Nepal, and India who have long enabled Westerners to tackle the world’s highest peaks, Bernadette McDonald shares their histories, perspectives, and present-day realities–including the high rate of attrition and the suffering of those left behind. Gripping, thought-provoking, and often shocking, Alpine Rising is an important addition to the canon of mountain literature.
    Maria Coffey, author of Where the Mountain Casts its Shadow
  • Timely and important, Alpine Rising is an authoritative and nuanced addition to mountaineering history. It evokes precious personal memories of time spent in the hills with Pertemba, Ang Phu, Little Karim, and so many others whose contributions are finally being fully acknowledged and celebrated.
    Sir Chris Bonington, author and mountaineer
  • Bernadette McDonald has shown once again that she is the best equipped mountaineering author to give these irreplaceable people the credit they so fully deserve. Alpine Rising is a brilliant read and fills an important gap in the rich history of mountaineering literature.
    Bob A. Schelfhout Aubertijn, mountaineering historian
  • In this courageous book, McDonald documents how significant contributions by local climbers in the Greater Ranges have been consistently underappreciated, and underreported, throughout mountaineering history. She skillfully shows how relationships and dynamics between local and foreign climbers have evolved, creating a compelling, impactful, and long overdue story.
    Steve Swenson, author of Karakoram
  • Alpine Rising is a wonderfully written account of the truly unsung heroes of Himalayan climbing. The Indigenous Sherpa, Balti, and others of the region have for many years shouldered the brunt of burden and broken trail, often with little recognition, which led to the success of Western-based expeditions. Their tenacity and drive have allowed them to finally step out from the shadows, take the lead, and come to the forefront of alpine ascents and guiding across the globe. I’m honored to have worked with some of these climbers as teammates.
    Ed Viesturs, author of No Shortcuts to the Top