When I saw this book offered on NetGalley, I couldn't believe that I had never heard of this feat by this courageous group of female climbers. After reading it, I now understand why and frankly, it's about time that their accomplishment gets the recognition it deserves. Here is my review of "Thirty Below."
Title/Author:
“Thirty Below: The Harrowing and Heroic Story
of the First All-Women’s Ascent on Denali” by Cassidy Randall
Rating:
5 of 5 stars (excellent)
Review:
A historic achievement occurred on July 6,
1970 when a group of six women became the first all-female team to reach the
peak of a mountain higher than 20,000 feet when they reached the summit of
Denali. While they were not one of the first females to reach this peak
(Barbara Washburn was in 1947), it was still an amazing accomplishment. The stories of each of the women and the
harrowing experience they had while climbing are told in this excellent book by
Cassidy Randall.
All six women – Grace Hoeman, Arlene Blum,
Margaret Clark, Margaret Young, Faye Kerr, and Dana Isherwood – were established
climbers with various amounts of experience.
Grace organized this team after losing her husband Vin to the mountains
and failing to reach the peak of Denali on an earlier attempt. Her experiences and determination to reach
the summit makes for excellent reading, even if a bit slower than the later
parts of the book. This is also the case
for the other five women – all have excellent stories about their
mountaineering experience and their personal lives captured by Randall.
At this time, mountaineering was a sport
dominated by men and overcoming the sexism and belief that women were not
capable of scaling such mountains was a huge motivation factor for the “Denali Damsels”
as they became to be known. It was such
a strong belief for them that at times they would refuse assistance from other
climbing teams’ male members because they felt by doing so, it was reinforce
the incorrect notion that women could not accomplish this without assistance
from men. This view about female climbers was pervasive at this time and that
is a topic visited frequently by Randall.
It really makes the accomplishment even more impressive.
While the stories of each woman were great to
read, their climb up Denali was even better.
Randall wrote this part of the book much like an adventure novel,
complete with drama and subplots. Will
the team make it? Will Grace, who became
extremely ill, survive? Will the team overcome their differences and squabbles that
inevitably hit all climbing teams? This
latter question was especially noteworthy given the way they assembled and
their different backgrounds and nationalities. And of course, we know the
answer to the first question. That doesn’t
take away the excitement a reader will experience when picking up this book
about a extraordinary achievement that is finally getting the recognition it
deserves.
I wish to thank Abrams Press for providing a copy of the book via NetGalley.
The opinions expressed in this review are strictly my own.
Link: Thirty
Below: The Harrowing and Heroic Story of the First All-Women's Ascent of
Denali: Randall, Cassidy: 9781419771538: Amazon.com: Books
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