Sixteen-year-old Allen Steck made his initial climb, a first ascent of Mount
Maclure in the Sierras, with no hardware, no ropes, no experience. But the
event turned his into a mountaineer’s life.
Over 70 years later Steck has had a prolific climbing career, including a 1954
expedition to Makalu, a 1963 first ascent of the south face of the Clyde
Minaret, and a 1965 first ascent of the Hummingbird Ridge on Mount Logan. In
1967, with Steve Roper, he co-founded and edited Ascent magazine. Two years
later, his interest in the far reaches of the world led him to partner in
Mountain Travel, America’s first true adventure travel company.
These are stories from the days when mountain climbing was discovery, when men
like Steck forged new routes, both literal and literary. With dry humor and
detailed recall, he captures the excitement and intrigue of a time when there
were few rules and no guidelines. As he says, ‹We do not deceive ourselves
that we are engaging in an activity that is anything but debilitating,
dangerous, euphoric, kinesthetic, expensive, frivolously essential,
economically useless and totally without redeeming social significance. One
should not probe for deeper meanings.›
With amazing photographs, many published for the first time, this memoir is a
treasure, an inspiration, and an anchor to the foundation of the life-changing
sport of alpine climbing.
At ninety-one-years young, Allen Steck tells of – and reflects on – a life
that has spanned almost all of climbing history. These are stories for the
beginner and the veteran alike, tales to be marveled at, re-read, and re-told.
Ultimately they beg a simple, profound question: When you are 91, what stories
will you have to tell? Steve House, Climber, Author, Beyond the Mountain and
Training for the New Alpinism
Allen Steck, born in 1926, is an American mountaineer and alpine climber. He
has climbed around the world, sending a number of first ascents, including the
Steck-Salathe Route up Sentinal Rock in Yosemite Valley, and Hummingbird Ridge
in Canada. Jointly with Norman Clyde, he was the first recipient of the Sierra
Club’s Francis P. Farquhar Mountaineering Award in 1970. Also in 1970, he won
the American Alpine Club’s Literary Award for co-authoring Fifty Classic
Climbs of North America with Steve Roper.