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  • Winter 8000

  • Climbing the World's Highest Mountains in the Coldest Season
  • By: Bernadette McDonald
  • Narrated by: Merryn D. Griffin
  • Length: 11 hrs and 39 mins
  • 4.6 out of 5 stars (14 ratings)

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Winter 8000

By: Bernadette McDonald
Narrated by: Merryn D. Griffin
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Summary

"He appeared, without a word, in the tent’s entrance, covered in ice. He looked like anyone would after spending over 24 hours in a hurricane at over 8,000 meters. In winter. In the Karakoram. He was so exhausted he couldn’t speak."

Of all the games mountaineers play on the world’s high mountains, the hardest - and cruelest - is climbing the 14 peaks over 8,000 meters in the bitter cold of winter. Ferocious winds that can pick you up and throw you down, freezing temperatures that burn your lungs and numb your bones, weeks of psychological torment in dark isolation - these are adventures for those with an iron will and a ruthless determination.

For the first time, award-winning author Bernadette McDonald tells the story of how Poland’s ice warriors made winter their own, perfecting what they dubbed "the art of suffering" as they fought their way to the summit of Everest in the winter of 1980 - the first 8,000-metre peak they climbed this way, but by no means their last. She reveals what it was that inspired the Poles to take up this brutal game, how increasing numbers of climbers from other nations were inspired to enter the arena, and how competition intensified as each remaining peak finally submitted to leave just one awaiting a winter ascent, the meanest of them all: K2.

Winter 8000 is the story of true adventure at its most demanding.

©2020 Bernadette McDonald (P)2020 Vertebrate Publishing
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What listeners say about Winter 8000

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Often a Harrowing Listen

A massive book well told, documenting the world's toughest ever mountaineering feats. If you only ever read one mountaineering book then this is the one listen to. Climbing mountains like Everest, Kangchenjunga, Nanga Parbat in winter, often surrounded by tragedy. A gripping book.

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Probably better as a book - awful narration

The narration with strange cliched nasal accents for some of the protagonists really put me off. When reading in her own voice, she was weirdly mechanical. Almost unlistenable. The book itself is probably better than the audio book, but this was a huge disappointment. I’m not even sure why I persevered.

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