Alex Honnold, El Capitan, and the Climbing Life
Ratings2
Average rating3.5
We live in a golden age of niche hobbyists getting very famous thanks to the internet. Before, people who were extraordinarily good at a thing the vast majority of people didn't know about would only be well-known within that circle. Nowadays though all it takes is one popular YouTube channel or influencer catching wind of a weird hobby and these people are known to millions of viewers. It is through these avenues that I first became aware of Alex Honnold, the best in the world at climbing massive mountains without any assistance. I remember being in awe at what he did but never looked more into his story. After seeing this book on the shelf of my local bookstore I had to pick it up based on my previous interest. Part of the fun of reading (at least for me) is learning about experiences that I will never have personally, and few things are as out of my theoretical wheelhouse as climbing up a massive wall in Yosemite National Park. I eagerly dove in, looking forward to finding out more about what it takes to do something so incredible. To the book's credit, it absolutely does what I wanted it to do. I now know a lot more about Alex Honnold, both as a climber and as a human being. Throughout the book Synnott does something that I really like, which is looking deep into who the climbers are as people rather than strictly what they do on the rock. As a veteran climber himself, Synnott understands what makes climbers like Honnold tick and does his absolute best to explain why they do the things they do. The book is at its best when Synnott tries to answer these questions. He's a pretty perfect author for this book as he has the necessary hands-on experience doing things like what Honnold did as well as the necessary writing experience to explain it in a way that makes sense to a non-climber. I honestly think this book is about as good as it can be, but I can't say that I totally love it. I was racking my brain for a while to figure out why until it hit me: climbing is just not an easy thing to write about. There's a reason that so many major climbs are filmed and why every prominent climber seems to have a film crew around them: it's really hard to convey what happens on the side of a mountain into words. Synnott doesn't go too deep on the technical jargon, but there were points where I had a tough time visualizing exactly what he was talking about despite his best efforts for that reason. The moves these climbers pull off as well as the features on the rock that they maneuver around are just so hard to picture if you haven't seen them for yourself. That's why the book is better when it doesn't talk too much about the climbing itself, rather the people doing the climbing. I'm glad I read this book. When it's good it's really good and there's a lot to like about it. I imagine that those who are deeper into climbing would get quite a bit more out of it. But for me personally, it just stands as quite good, rather than amazing.