• Master of Thin Air

  • Life and Death on the World's Highest Peaks
  • By: Andrew Lock
  • Narrated by: P. J. Ochlan
  • Length: 12 hrs and 50 mins
  • 4.6 out of 5 stars (48 ratings)

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Master of Thin Air  By  cover art

Master of Thin Air

By: Andrew Lock
Narrated by: P. J. Ochlan
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Publisher's summary

Named one of the "Five Adventure Books You Need to Read This Summer" by Backpacker Magazine.

For listeners of Into Thin Air, riveting high-altitude drama and the passion and drive that inspire outsized mountaineering achievements.

Master of Thin Air opens with a fall that the author very nearly could not stop down an almost vertical rock ramp leading to a 3,000-foot drop. The qualities that saved him then on K2 - in addition to his mountaineering know-how and sheer good luck - drove his 16-year journey to summit all of the world's 8,000ers, the 14 peaks that exceed 8,000 meters (26,000-plus feet) and take climbers into the death zone. Incredibly, he accomplished that feat without the aid of bottled oxygen for every mountain but one. By preference, he climbed solo or in small teams, without Sherpas. During 23 expeditions, he spent a total of three years clinging to the sides of dangerous mountains. He lost more than 20 climbing friends and, in April 2014, witnessed Everest's deadliest avalanche.

His book is a riveting, often thrilling account of what it takes to challenge the Earth's highest peaks and survive. It tells of death-defying ascents and even riskier descents, the gut-dropping consequences of the smallest mistakes or even just bad luck, the camaraderie and human drama of expeditions, and the exhilaration of altitude. It is also the inspiring story of what motivates a person to achieve an extraordinary dream, a story of passion, resourcefulness, self-motivation, and hope - even in the most dire moments.

©2014 Andrew Lock (P)2015 Audible, Inc.

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Great Book!!!

Great book!!! Couldn't stop listening to it... If you like mountaineering books, you will love this book and if you don't love mountaineering books you will throughly enjoy this book haha... Good narration and well written book...

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Tedious, redundant

The same story over and over. Ed Visters books are much better. Very repetitive, self aggrandizing which is understandable given the enormous challenges involved. Just way too much of the same.

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Narrator was difficult to listen to.

Two stars to the narrator for trying, but the accent is terrible.
For an author who is at pains to make the distinction between a 'real' climber and one who is just guided along, I find it ironic that he has allowed his book to be read by someone with a fake Australian accent.
I would have preferred to listen to a 'real' Aussie read it. (I wouldn't have cared if an American read it with an American accent, I just found the fake accent very distracting).
I suppose I should have been a 'real' reader.....gotten an ebook and read it myself. At least I know how to pronounce Mt. Kosciuszko

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