No Place To Fall : Superalpinism in the High Himalaya
Publisher: Vertebrate Publishing Ltd
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Victor Saunders' follow-up to his Boardman Tasker Prize-winning debut Elusive Summits, No Place to Fall chronicles three extraordinary expeditions in Nepal, the Karakoram and the Kumaon. Each shares the exhilaration of attempting new alpine-style routes on terrifyingly committing mountains.
In 1989, Saunders and Steve Sustad completed a difficult route on the West Face of Makalu II, only to be brought to a storm-bound halt above 7,000 metres while descending. Without food or bivouac gear, they endured a tortuous descent after a night in the open. Two years later the pair joined a small team in the Hunza valley exploring elusive access to a giant hidden pillar on the unvisited South-East Face of Ultar, one of the highest and most shapely of the world's unclimbed peaks.
In 1992, Saunders was part of a joint Indian-British team climbing various peaks in the Panch Chuli range. A happy and successful expedition narrowly avoided ending in tragedy when Stephen Venables broke both legs in a fall on the descent from Panch Chuli V and Chris Bonington survived another fall going to his aid. The dramatic evacuation of Venables, in which the author took a major part, forms an exciting climax to a story of cutting-edge, alpine-style climbing in the world's highest mountains.
No Place to Fall offers enviable mountain exploration, enriched by sharing the lives of the mountain peoples along the way. Saunders casts a perceptive, if bemused, eye over his fellow climbers and reflects on the calculation of risk that drives them back year after year to chance their lives in high places.