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The Himalayan Tragedy That Forever Changed Mountaineering

In 1976, Nanda Devi Unsoeld, the daughter of legendary mountaineer Willi Unsoeld, died on the mountain for which she was named. This is the story of Deviโ€™s life and of the historic climb that killed her. A riveting adventure read, it doesnโ€™t shy away from highlighting the history of misogyny, cultural appropriation, and selfishness in mountaineering culture:

In late September of 1975, at the Unsoeld home in Olympia, Willi met with 26-year-old John Roskelley, another very accomplished American alpinist, putting plans in motion. They were of different minds about leadership and climbing, and women, tooโ€”namely, whether they belonged on major expeditions with men. Roskelley tried to convince Willi not to invite a female climber named Marty Hoey to join the group. He believed that the presence of women could complicate things; he worried that emotions could get out of hand when the two sexes were put together in high-stakes, high-altitude situations.

It didnโ€™t help that Hoey had been dating Peter Lev, another veteran of the Dhaulagiri expedition who they wanted on the team; Roskelley hated the idea of a coupleโ€™s quarrels bleeding into the teamโ€™s daily demands. He also assumed the climb would be a traditional, equipment-heavy effort, relying on multiple camps and fixed ropes, while Willi and Lev seemed intent on an alpine-style ascent, lighter on ropes and happening fast.

As they wrangled over the climbโ€™s fundamentals, Devi herself burst in, glowing with sweat. Sheโ€™d just biked seven miles home from a soccer game. Roskelley would later recall his first impression in his 1987 book,ย Nanda Devi: The Tragic Expedition,ย saying that Devi โ€œswept in like a small tornado after an obviously brutal game of soccer.โ€

In public speaking engagements for the next few years, Willi would sometimes describe this moment, too, including an extra detail about some of the first words out of Deviโ€™s mouth that evening: โ€œYouโ€™re Roskelley,โ€ she said. โ€œI understand you have trouble with women.โ€

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