
Everest: It's Not About the Summit
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Narrated by:
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John Weston
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By:
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Ellis J Stewart
About this listen
Truly Inspirational! Epic! One of the Best! Amazing Listen! This Everest book tops them all!
Everest: It’s not about the summit, is a remarkable account of a lifelong goal altered in tragic circumstances two years running by the two worst disasters in Mount Everest’s history. Throughout it all Ellis Stewart shows a sense of humility and compassion sharing a heartfelt and emotional twenty year journey. From the streets of northern England through to the valleys and high mountains of Nepal, Stewart shared his story with thousands of followers on social media, winning over the hearts and minds of many. A ground swell of support sent Stewart to achieve his dream, not once but twice. Nobody could have anticipated the events that would follow. Events that would define Stewart in ways he couldn't possibly have imagined.
Stewart is not your stereotypical mountaineer. Through the steps he took and his entrepreneurial spirit he was able to fund almost entirely the costs for two Everest expeditions without corporate assistance.
In the summer of 2015 Stewart began to write his story of being caught up in these two tragic seasons on Everest. In this very book, he writes very candidly about not only his experiences on the mountain but also what drove and propelled him towards Everest in the first place. Not able to entice a publisher to take the project on, Stewart wouldn’t take no for an answer and decided to self-publish the book. After launching a massively successful crowdfunding campaign Stewart was able to pay the editing and printing costs to release this book as a paperback, which he did to rave reviews in late 2016. Due to popular demand Stewart launched another campaign to bring the book out in the hardcover format. Again this was a success.
Everest: It’s not about the Summit, invites you into an intoxicating world, one where the margin between success and failure is brutally slim. This is a moving book with tragedy and commitment to a cause as a very central theme. It is a real story about real people. Whether it’s your usual genre of book or not doesn't matter as it's basically a cracking story. You don’t need to be a climber to enjoy this book at all. It has universal appeal and is a true inspirational cliff hanger for all.
Looking forward to hearing about a hartlepudlian ...........
The narrator demonstrates as much passion as a squashed frog (the monkey was french) what a damn shame because for me it spoilt the story ...........sorry 🥲
The narrator oh dear me......
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Couldnt stop listening!
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Firstly, the narration is very monotone, with the narrator constantly sounding like he is on the brink of tears. It always puzzles me as to why authors don't read their own memoirs, but they have their reasons. I can't however think that Ellis' oration would have been worse than the incumbent! The narrator also clearly had no interest in the subject and/or had not researched the pronunciation of various elements to the sport, namely the mountains themselves. He pronounced Scafell Pike like 'scaffold' and also got Himalayan peaks wrong on the first go. Not the end of the world granted...but irritating for someone keen on the subject.
Secondly the story itself is full of self-doubt and failures. I understand that this, in escence IS the story, yet none of them are springboards to success and do get a touch tedious, however you may disagree. At the same time, the USP of the book is I think, how a man from very humble beginnings eventually managed to get onto the slopes of Everest with little or no clue about fundraising and despite all these failures. That would potentially be a great inspiration for other people in similar circumstances and with similar dreams, but when every single dull failure is noted...with the narrator's tone...it does wear on a tad.
The book is interesting in terms of an ordinary person trying to reach his goal, and is something of an inside story into the avalanche and earthquake disasters, but I the relative lack of detail concerning those events, coupled with the over-emphasis on the long succession of failures before stepping foot on the mountain, perhaps illustrates how those two elements should have been reveresed as to their prominence in the text?
Ben Waddams
Interesting for certain people,but perhaps not all
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Very interesting
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Really boring
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