*Name Your Favorite Mag Based Climbing Lit Pieces and Why*

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AP

Trad climber
Calgary
Nov 10, 2011 - 11:43am PT
These seem to be old articles. Is this because of our ages and memories of what inspired us in our youth, or was the writing better in days gone by?
I think "Art of the States" and "States of the Art" were an inspiration and Mark and Max are still climbing well.
This isn't a mag but Chris Jones' book on Climbing in North America was my bible as a young climber.
I agree the article on North Face North Twin was a classic.
crunch

Social climber
CO
Nov 11, 2011 - 09:52am PT
I used to love reading articles by Alex MacIntyre. Full of humor in the face of serious risk. He died, 27(?), mid-1980s. Such promise.....

He seemed to have some of the wit and lightness of touch of Patey. There were a number of articles in Mountain.

My all-time favorite has to be Pratt's The View from Deadhorse Point. More developed, more confident, more outgoing than his few other other essays. I was very excited when Chuck's cousin, Greg, gave me permission to reprint this in my book, Desert Towers.

A wonderful counterpoint to Chuck's essay is Steve Komito's story of the first ascent of Standing Rock. Not exactly a magazine article, but an essay of similar size printed in Beyond the Vertical.

Pratt conveys a sense that at some point one does not need to actually go climb anything. He has gone so far beyond the shallow tourist experience--largely through his climbing trips--that he is, finally, at one with the vast landscape. Komito conveys the no-nonsense excitement and drive of the Coloradans, Kor and Ingalls, in their element, immersed in the same mythical landscape but rising above it, getting stuff done.

I asked Komito if I could reprint this gem, now long out of print; he agreed. To put these and many more voices in one book was a great privilege and thrill. Seemingly the folks at Banff agreed:

http://www.banffcentre.ca/mountainfestival/competitions/book/2011/#panel-6





MH2

climber
Nov 11, 2011 - 12:26pm PT
was the writing better in days gone by?



I don't think so, but it was different.


I like writing whether funny or hair-raising that I can identify with, that I recognize on some level.


I also like writing that goes outside my own experience but that still has an unmistakable kernel of truth.


I especially like the writing of John Muir.

Stickeen was published in Summit magazine, Spring 1992.


Even writing about John Muir has power. I don't know if a self-styled "blogazine" counts, but here is an excerpt from a lengthier piece in Footless Crow:


http://footlesscrow.blogspot.com/2011/09/this-week-john-muiron-edge-of-abyss.html

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