Most summit stories start at the top. This one starts in the kitchens, rope queues, radio tents, and dark pre-dawn corridors where other people’s lives are already at stake. It follows sherpa mountaineering labour, high altitude porters, cooks, weather readers, and rescuers across Himalayan and Andean routes, showing how every step a client takes rests on a dense web of contracts, favours, and quiet expertise. Instead of repeating familiar hero narratives, the book treats the mountain as a workplace. It traces mountain village economies that depend on a few short seasons, unpacks himalaya climbing ethics and debates over fair pay, and listens to andes expedition workers weighing risk against school fees and medical bills. Rescue scenes and rescue stories mountains reveal who is expected to step forward when things go wrong and who pays the price long after helicopters leave. Along the way, the book spotlights women high altitude work, shifting roles for younger crews, and the uneasy balance of risk and reward climbing offers to whole communities. For readers who love big peaks but feel uneasy about behind the summit myths, it offers a more honest, grounded way to read expedition photos. The promise is simple: once you see how many hands are on the rope, you will never look at a summit shot the same way again.
Ridge Lines
SKU: 9789375360476
$20.99 Regular Price
$17.12Sale Price
- Clara Von Mirelle writes narrative non-fiction about places where endurance, inequality, and aspiration collide. Her work lingers in the spaces between tents, valleys, and summit photos, asking whose labour makes adventure possible and whose stories are left outside the frame. Drawn to the human textures of mountain corridors, she is particularly interested in how risk, pay, and prestige are negotiated between foreign clients and local workers. Over years of listening to climbers, cooks, rope-fixers, and porters, she has come to see high-altitude routes as workplaces as much as wild landscapes. Her writing weaves together close-up portraits, social history, and questions of justice, with a steady respect for the communities that live year-round in the shadow of famous peaks. A recurring thread in her work is how small decisions on the ridge echo through households, village economies, and future seasons. She writes for readers who love the mountains but want a more honest account of what a summit truly costs.


















