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Books

Which mountaineering book to read next?

Published September 2020 by Emma. Updated September 2020.

Trying to decide on which mountaineering book you should read next? Or even where to start? Use our handy mind map to find a pathway for reading books you’ll like.

We created this mind map to show the connections between many of the books we’ve read. It’s by no means a complete list of mountaineering books, but it does show how many mountaineers and stories are connected, and what a small community it is.

It’s fascinating to get different perspectives on the same story or the same mountain or the same climber. The links we’ve found include:

  • mountaineers that were inspired by a particular book or person e.g. Ed Viesturs being inspired to climb by reading Annapurna
  • mountaineers that climbed together and are mentioned in each others’ books e.g. Anatoli Boukreev and Andrew Lock
  • or simply mountaineers that they came across or mentioned in their book
  • personal stories based on the same event e.g. all the books about the 1996 Everest disaster
Mountaineering books mind map

Where to start?

Popular books that people gravitate towards are those highlighted in green on the mind map i.e.

  • Annapurna – Maurice Herzog
  • Into Thin Air – Jon Krakauer
  • High Adventure or View From The Summit – Edmund Hillary

Topics to get engrossed in

14 x 8000ers – mountaineers who have completed the ‘grand slam’ of mountaineering – climbing all the highest peaks in the world over 8000m e.g.

  • Everest – Reinhold Messner – first to climb all 14 x 8000ers
  • No Shortcuts to the Top – Ed Viesturs – first American
  • Summit 8000 – Andrew Lock – first Australian and British Commonwealth citizen

Female Mountaineers – there are not nearly as many female mountaineers, so it’s fascinating to read about experiences from a female perspective e.g.

  • Arlene Blum – Breaking Trail
  • Cathy O’Dowd – Just For The Love Of It
  • Lene Gammelgaard – Climbing High

Classics – the early days of mountaineering and ascents of the 8000ers and other significant climbs e.g.

  • Annapurna – Maurice Herzog
  • Conquistadors of the Useless – Lionel Terray
  • Blank on the Map – Eric Shipton
  • The White Spider – Heinrich Harrer
  • High Adventure or View From The Summit – Edmund Hillary
  • Everest the Hard Way – Chris Bonington

1996 Everest Disaster – while we’d rather read about great mountaineering experiences rather than disasters, this topic probably has the most books written about it, and it’s interesting to read the story from so many different perspectives e.g.

  • Into Thin Air – Jon Krakauer
  • The Climb – Anatoli Boukreev with G. Weston deWalt
  • Left for Dead – Beck Weathers
  • Dr on Everest – Kenneth Kamler M.D.
  • Mountain Madness (the story of Scott Fischer) – Robert Birkby

For more books, see our list of Books to read for Armchair Mountaineers.

Happy reading!

Mt Everest

Yak or Yeti? The Himalayan Quiz

Published December 2017 by Cut Lunch Adventures. Updated February 2021.

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Books to Read for the Adventure Traveller

Published May 2017 by Emma. Updated June 2025.

Do you need to feed your spirit of adventure? If armchair mountaineering isn’t for you,  there are also many other good adventure travel books we’ve read that give you great insight into travel and diverse countries:

  • Life-Changing Adventure – Emma Huffam and Trevor Builder. Written by us! Be daring, be inspired. Adventure is waiting for you.
  • The Art of Travel  – Alain de Botton. Provides an insight into everything from holiday romance to hotel mini-bars, airports to sight-seeing. This book suggests how we might be happier on our journeys.
  • Walking – One Step At A Time – Erling Kagge. A book about the love of exploration, the delight of discovery and the equilibrium that can be found in this most simple of activities.
  • Adventurous Spirit – Heather Hawkins. Sometimes life takes us to places we never planned to go.
  • Facing Fear – Lisa Blair. The first woman to sail solo around Antarctica.
  • Adventure Revolution – Belinda Kirk. The life-changing power of choosing challenge.

Asia

  • India: Holy Cow – Sarah MacDonald. A rollercoaster ride through a land of chaos and contradiction with a woman on a mission to save her soul, her love life – and her sanity.
  • India: Shantaram – Gregory David Roberts. A compelling tale of a hunted man who had lost everything – his home, his family, and his soul – and came to find his humanity while living at the wildest edge of experience
  • Pakistan: A Blonde in the Bazaar – Jill Worrell. Offering a unique insight into Pakistan’s cultures, superb scenery, fascinating history and hospitable and passionate people.
  • Afghanistan: A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush – Eric Newby. A classic journey from Mayfair, London to the wild mountains of the Hindu Kush, north-east of Kabul. This is one of the most spectacularly beautiful wildernesses on earth.
  • Tibet (China): Last Seen in Lhasa – Claire Scobie. The story of an extraordinary friendship in modern Tibet, China.
  • Siberia/Mongolia/Himalayas: The Long Walk – Slavomir Rawicz. The true story of a trek to freedom.

Europe

  • France: Almost French – Sarah Turnbull. A Sydney journalist recounts her unexpected move to Paris. Here, she fell in love and came to cherish the city’s charm, fashion, food, paradoxes, and dinner parties.
  • France: A Piano in the Pyrenees – Tony Hawks. Inspired by breathtaking views and romantic dreams of finding love in the mountains, Tony Hawks impulsively buys a house in the French Pyrenees. Here, he plans to finally fulfil his childhood fantasy of mastering the piano, untroubled by the problems of the world.
  • Italy: Girl by Sea – Penelope Green. Across kitchen tables, in bustling cafés, and over long lunches under vine-covered pergolas, Penny learns the art of Italian cooking, builds friendships, and discovers the rhythms and secrets of island life.

Central and South America

  • Brazil: Chasing Bohemia – Carmen Michael. A story about living for the day – and the surprising little truths about yourself you can discover through being immersed in poverty, isolation, and a culture that is not your own.
  • Cuba: Enduring Cuba – Zoe Bran. Intrigued by Cuba, Zoe Bran visits this country of contradictions. Interweaving history and current events, personal and wider viewpoints, she paints a vivid and compelling picture of contemporary Cuba.

Books to Read for Armchair Mountaineers

Published May 2017 by Emma. Updated December 2025.

books by NZ and Australian mountaineers
Books about New Zealand and Australian mountaineers

We can’t resist books about mountaineering and rock climbing. It’s something to do with the fascination of the worlds highest mountain and the simplicity of expedition life. It’s also the focus and dedication that climbers have to their goal, and raw human experience.

In this post:
  • Expeditions – Mt Everest, K2 and Annapurna etc
  • Climbing All 14 8000m Mountains
  • Mountain Books – Mountaineers
  • Rock Climbing
  • Antarctic Expeditions
  • Mountain Books – Collections and Stories
  • WHAT TO READ NEXT?

Expeditions – Mt Everest, K2 and Annapurna etc

  • Fallen – Mick Conefrey. George Mallory and the Tragic 1924 Everest Expedition
  • Everest 1922 – Mick Conefrey. The epic story of the first attempt on the world’s highest mountain
  • View from the Summit – Sir Edmund Hillary. An engaging story from the legendary New Zealander about the first summit of Mt Everest
  • Into Thin Air – Jon Krakauer. The well-known personal account of the 1996 Everest disaster. Also Eiger Dreams by the same author – a collection of writing on mountaineering.
  • The Climb – Anatoli Boukreev and G. Weston deWalt. The alternative account from the well-known Russian Kazakhstani mountaineer and high-altitude guide. Also by Anatoli Boukreev – Above the Clouds. A fascinating insight into his life beyond just the 1996 disaster.
  • Doctor on Everest – Kenneth Kamler. An account of the 1996 Everest disaster from a doctor’s perspective – medicine at it’s extreme
  • Dead Lucky – Lincoln Hall. Life after death with another Aussie mountaineer on Mt Everest
  • Left for Dead – Beck Weathers with Stephen G. Michaud. There aren’t many adventures like the 1996 Everest disaster which have had so many books written from different perspectives – the more you read the more you appreciate the challenges of making life-or-death decisions in extreme conditions
  • Annapurna – Maurice Herzog. A book which inspired many to become mountaineers. The remarkable story of the first ascent of Annapurna in 1950, beautifully told, it takes you on a true explorers journey through unmapped territory to find a route, the exhilaration of reaching the summit and the unrelenting challenge to make it back in one piece. For an alternative view of the story read True Summit by David Roberts – what really happened on Annapurna!
  • Everest The Hard Way – Chris Bonington. The story of the 1975 British expedition to climb the South West Face of Everest.
  • No Way Down – Graham Bowley. A dramatic story of the struggle for survival on the upper slopes of K2 in 2008
  • The Snow Leopard – Peter Matthiessen. A 250 mile expedition through the Himalayas to the Crystal Mountain on the Tibetan plateau. Not only an exquisite book of natural history but an extraordinary account of an inner journey.
  • I’ll Call You In Kathmandu – Bernadette McDonald. The Elizabeth Hawley story. She left America in the 1950s to travel the world and although she’s never climbed a mountain , she became one of the most important figures in Himalayan climbing history. 
  • Everest from Sea to Summit – Tim Macartney-Snape. The story of the first complete ascent of Everest. You can also see the documentary film of this expedition here.
  • Himalayan Dreaming – Will Steffen (Australian National University Press). Australian Mountaineering in the Great Ranges of Asia 1922-1990.
  • Ascent of Nanda Devi – H.W. Tilman. (Included in ‘The Seven Mountain-Travel Books’ compilation.) Regarded as a classic, this is the 1937 story of the first ascent of the highest mountain to be climbed prior to the ascent of Annapurna in 1950.
  • Himalaya Shuttlecock – Hans Kopp. A travelling-companion at one time or another of Heinrich Harrer. Kopp crossed the Himalayas by various means in all six times.
  • Beyond the Snow Leopard – Bill Crozier. Seeking the snow leopard in the Himalaya (Ladakh, Nepal and Tibet), guided by the writings of Himalayan explorers and Buddhist monks over the centuries.
  • In the Throne Room of the Mountain Gods – Galen Rowell. A member of an American mountaineering team that set off in 1975 to climb the world’s second highest peak in Pakistan’s Karakoram range tells of the successes and failures that have marked various expeditions

Climbing All 14 8000m Mountains

  • No Shortcuts to the Top and Himalayan Quest – Ed Viesturs with David Roberts. The first American to climb all fourteen 8000m peaks
  • Summit 8000 – Andrew Lock. The first Australian mountaineer to summit all the the world’s fourteen 8000m peaks

Mountain Books – Mountaineers

  • Everest Inc – Will Cockrell. The Renegades and Rogues Who Built an Industry at the Top of the World
  • Art of Freedom – Bernadette McDonald – the life and climbs of Voytek Kurtyka.
  • Conquistadors of the Useless – Lionel Terray – the autobiography of one of the greatest alpinists of his time, and one of the finest and most important mountaineering books ever written.
  • Starlight and Storm – Gaston Rebuffat. The record of a young man’s life devoted entirely to high mountains – one of the greatest climbers of all time.
  • High Exposure – David Breashears – mountaineer and acclaimed filmmaker (including the IMAX movie Everest, filmed in 1996). This book invites readers into the subculture of climbing and the pursuit of excellence and quest for self-knowledge that comes with mountaineering at the extreme.
  • Going Up Is Easy – Lydia Bradey – The first woman to ascend Everest without oxygen.
  • Maverick Mountaineer – Robert Wainwright. George Ingle Finch, the wild colonial boy who took on the British Alpine establishment
  • Nanga Parbat Pilgrimage – Hermann Buhl – The great mountaineering classic.
  • Mountain Madness – Robert Birkby. An in-depth portrait of well-known American mountaineer and leader of one of the 1996 expeditions, Scott Fischer. This book also gives a much broader view than just the 1996 disaster.
  • Where the Mountains Throw Their Dice – Paul Hersey. An insight into the Kiwi climbing psyche
  • The Ledge – Jim Davidson and Kevin Vaughan. Achieving the impossible one step at a time – a dramatic escape from a crevasse on Mt Rainier. Also by Jim Davidson – The Next Everest – surviving the mountain’s deadliest day and finding the resilience to climb again.
  • Dingle – Graeme Dingle – one of New Zealand’s well-known adventurers. Discovering the sense in adventure. Also by the same author – Wall of Shadows – the story of the New Zealand Jannu expedition.
  • Sheer Will – Michael Groom. An Aussie mountaineer who survived frostbite and went on to climb the world’s highest mountains
  • Breaking Trail – Arlene Blum. A pioneer who defied the climbing establishment of the 1970s by leading the first all-female teams on successful ascents of Mt McKinley (Denali) and Annapurna.
  • Kiss or Kill – Mark Twight. Confessions of a serial climber.
  • Postcards from the Ledge – Greg Child. A realistic slice of high altitude adventure.
  • Tomaz Humar – Bernadette McDonald. The intense and penetrating biography of one of the brightest burning flames in modern climbing.
  • Fear No Boundary – Lincoln Hall with Sue Fear. One woman’s amazing journey – the first Australian woman to summit Mt Everest via the North Ridge Route.
  • Nine Lives – Robert Mads Anderson. Expeditions to Everest
  • Everest: The Challenge – Francis Younghusband. Everest expeditions.
  • One Way Ticket – Rolfe Oostra. Mishaps and mayhem in the world of adventure.
  • Everest Mountain Guide – Guy Cotter. The remarkable story of a Kiwi mountaineer.
  • First on the Rope – Roger Frison-Roche. English translation of the French fiction classic Premier de Cordee – a tale about the harsh lives of mountain guides and their families in the French Alps in the 1920s and 1930s. A great read, written by a mountain guide.
  • A Climbing Life – Armando Corvini. The extraordinary life story of climber, caver, businessman, teacher and father Armando Corvini.

Rock Climbing

  • Alone on the Wall – Alex Honnold with David Roberts. Perhaps the world’s best ‘free-solo’ climber – scaling impossible rock faces without ropes, pitons or any other support
  • The Push – Tommy Caldwell. A rock climber’s journey of endurance, risk and going beyond limits
  • The Tower – Kelly Cordes. A chronicle of climbing and controversy on Cerro Torre.
  • White Spider – Heinrich Harrer. The classic account of the ascent of the Eiger.
  • The Impossible Climb – Mark Synnott. The story of Alex Honnold’s historic ascent of El Capitan combined with an insider portrait of the elite climbing community.
  • Climbing Free: My Life in the Vertical World – Lynn Hill with Greg Child. Autobiography, including the story of her first free ascent of the Nose on Yosemite’s El Capitan.

Antarctic Expeditions

  • Alone on the Ice – David Roberts. The greatest survival story in the history of exploration. The story of Douglas Mawson’s 1913 Australian Antarctic Expedition.
  • Edward Wilson of the Antarctic Naturalist and Friend – George Seaver. 1933.
  • South With Scott – Admiral Lord Mountevans. 1948. Story of the British Antarctic Expedition 1910-1913.

Mountain Books – Collections and Stories

Life-Changing Adventure – Emma Huffam and Trevor Builder. Written by us! Be daring, be inspired. Adventure is waiting for you.

House of Snow – an anthology of the greatest writing about Nepal. Introduction by Ed Douglas. Foreward by Sir Ranulph Fiennes.

To the Mountains – a collection of New Zealand alpine writing. Selected by Laurence Fearnley and Paul Hersey.

More Than It Hurts – and other stories of (mis)adventure by women who climb and mountaineer. Edited by Wendy Bruere and Emily Small.

Nanda Devi – Hugh Thomson. The story of an amazing journey to one of the remotest, most mysterious places on earth.

How the Hell Did I Get Here? – Pamela Lynch. A physical outward journey through the Himalayas and an inner journey that now sees her as a firm advocate for seeing, doing and experiencing life, as much and as often as we can.

Yak Girl – Dorje Dolma. The unusual memoir of a spirited girl in the inaccessible region of Dolpo, Nepal that was the setting for Peter Matthieson’s The Snow Leopard. If you like this book then watch this beautiful documentary about Dorje’s family – The Only Son.

In the Mountains – Ned Morgan. The health and wellbeing benefits of spending time at altitude.

Sherpa – Pradeep Bashyal & Ankit Babu Adhikari. Stories of life and eath from the forgotten guardians of Everest.

Mountaineers – Great Tales of Bravery and Conquest. The Alpine Club and Royal Geographic Society

In Highest Nepal – Norman Hardie. Fellow countryman and climbing comrade of Sir Edmund Hillary, Norman Hardie was was one of the climbers on the 1955 British expedition who first reached the summit of Kanchenjunga. He stayed on after the expedition to live in the Sherpa communities and to carry out surveying of the locality.

Mountaineering books

WHAT TO READ NEXT?

Use our mind map of related mountaineering books to help you find the next one to read.

For more reading here’s a list of adventure travel books we like, or try an adventure movie.

For Himalayan adventures, you can also read about our experience on the Everest Base Camp Trek, the Everest Circuit and Cho La Pass, or Mera Peak. Or for somewhere different try Mt Kinabalu in Borneo.

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