Audiobook9 hours
Hell or High Water: Surviving Tibet's Tsangpo River
Written by Peter Heller
Narrated by Patrick Lawlor
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
()
About this audiobook
The Tsangpo Gorge in southeastern Tibet has lured explorers and adventurers since its discovery. Sacred to the Buddhists, the inspiration for Shangri La, the Gorge is as steeped in legend and mystery as any spot on earth. As a river-running challenge, the remote Tsangpo is relentlessly unforgiving, more difficult than any stretch of river ever attempted. Its mysteries have withstood a century's worth of determined efforts to explore its length. The finest expedition paddlers on earth have tried. Several have died. All have failed. Until now.
In January 2002, in the heart of the Himalayan winter, a team of seven kayakers launched a meticulously planned assault of the Gorge. The paddlers were river cowboys, superstars in the universe of extreme kayaking who hop from continent to continent ready for the next death-defying pursuit. Accompanying them was author Peter Heller. A world-class kayaker in his own right, Heller has logged countless river miles and several major first descents. He joined the Tsangpo Expedition as a member of the ground support team and official expedition journalist and was also granted the exclusive opportunity to write the book about the descent.
Hell or High Water is that book-greatly expanded from his coverage for Outside magazine. Filled with history, white-knuckle drama, and mutiny in one of the world's most storied-and remote-locations, Hell or High Water is as riveting as any of the great epic adventures throughout history. Publication coincides with the release of a documentary about the expedition by National Geographic.
In January 2002, in the heart of the Himalayan winter, a team of seven kayakers launched a meticulously planned assault of the Gorge. The paddlers were river cowboys, superstars in the universe of extreme kayaking who hop from continent to continent ready for the next death-defying pursuit. Accompanying them was author Peter Heller. A world-class kayaker in his own right, Heller has logged countless river miles and several major first descents. He joined the Tsangpo Expedition as a member of the ground support team and official expedition journalist and was also granted the exclusive opportunity to write the book about the descent.
Hell or High Water is that book-greatly expanded from his coverage for Outside magazine. Filled with history, white-knuckle drama, and mutiny in one of the world's most storied-and remote-locations, Hell or High Water is as riveting as any of the great epic adventures throughout history. Publication coincides with the release of a documentary about the expedition by National Geographic.
Author
Peter Heller
Dr Peter Heller is Head of the Department of Qualification at the Institute of Solar Research, German Aerospace Center, Germany.
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Reviews for Hell or High Water
Rating: 3.706896551724138 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
29 ratings4 reviews
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I really loved Heller's The Dog Stars and some of his other books, so was very hopeful for this non-fiction account of kayaking in Tibet. However, it never really grabbed me. A better river adventure book is River of Doubt, by Candice Millard.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5In 2002 Scott Lindgren leads a group of kayakers on the first run of the Tsangpo Gorge, the Everest of rivers in the Eastern Himalaya, in a place so remote that it's near mythical Hidden Falls have been seen by only a handful of people. Peter Heller joins the company of Sherpas and porters that support them on shore. While the kayakers have some close calls on the river as they push the limits of the doable, the party on shore have to climb steep cliffs in difficult conditions to rejoin the river at the next camp as the river run through it's steep gorge.
I expected to love this one. But somehow I never really got into the story. One part was due to the fact that I just don't have an understanding of the sport. Though Heller gives a good introduction, I could not really get a feel for the skills needed, the difficulties the paddlers faced remained abstract. The other thing that felt weird, was that the book just seemed to skip from scene to scene without achieving a flow. I was often confused about the flow of time and had difficulties keeping the protagonists straight.
Nevertheless it was a fascinating tale and a grand adventure. There's also some interesting background on the history and culture of the place and a recounting of earlier visits. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Reads as a white-water version of Lord of the Rings - epic adventure by a small cluster of die-hard kayakers along the Tsanpo, the ferocious river of Tibet. Encompasses the difficulty of navigating local politics, the beauty of Tibetan culture, and the harshness of the Chinese occupation. Written as a documentary/autobiography.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This book tells the story of kayaking down a large portion of the Tsangpo river gorge, in the winter to hit it at lowest flow. The author and a large support group hike along the sides of the canyon. The Tsangpo drains most of the north side of the Himalayas before turning south in an extremely deep gorge between 23,000-foot mountains and entering India as the Brahmaputra. The huge volume of water going through the narrow gorge makes the river a terrible challenge for kayaking. The location, with the river, the lush jungle and snow, and old Tibetan monasteries sounds stunning. It is a good story. The author is a bit prone to exaggeration---e.g., talking about how they were entering an area where nobody had ever gone before when there are clear paths, or "It was the loveliest sunrise any of us had ever seen." This makes it hard to trust his descriptions of the river conditions. There aren't any photographs, nor a glossary to tell us the difference between a "hole" and a "pocket." It reads like an extended Outside magazine article, but it is still fun. He doesn't get too close to any of the kayakers, though, since there seem to be severe personal conflicts. The historical parts of the book, although short, are quite intriguing, and he gives his references. Derek Waller's "Pundits, British exploration of Tibet and Central Asia," and F.M. Bailey's "No passport to Tibet" in particular sound great. The first tells the story of British spies sent from India in to try to explore Tibet, and has one fascinating piece on attempts to discover where the Tsangpo went by trekking through the gorge.