Angie Abdou on why we love adventure tales | CBC Radio - Action News
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The Next Chapter

Angie Abdou on why we love adventure tales

Angie Abdou recommends a great Canadian novel for fans of Into Thin Air by Jon Krakauer.
If you like adventure books, Into Thin Air by Jon Krakauer and Every Lost Country by Steven Heighton are both excellent choices.

It's been20 years sinceInto Thin Airby Jon Krakauer was published.It's a riveting description of an expedition to summit Everest gone horribly wrong and ended witha record number of people killed as the result of a storm on the mountain. The book sparked a lot of debate on the value of climbing and the commercialization of MountEverest.

Angie Abdou is the author of The Bone Cage and The Canterbury Trail. She's alsoan athlete and and an outdoors enthusiast. She says if you liked Into Thin Air, you should check out Every Lost Country by Steven Heighton.

The appeal of mountain stories

Mountain stories have built in compelling narrative:Are they going to make the top? Are they going to live? Are they going to die? It's really high stakes, high tensions, the whole way. Someone called Into Thin Aira Hitchcock thriller with better scenery.

An athlete's perspective

I'm really interestedin why we push our bodies so hard. Jon Krakauer said the main thing about climbing Everest was enduring pain:how much pain can you endure? Even as an English professor, I like to studysport literature and why people push themselves. Social scientists have come up with this word, edgework, to describe extreme activities and why people do them. There's this idea that you're rebelling against scripted existence our lives are so heavily scripted but by engaging with these extreme sports, you're pushing outside of those scripts.

Angie Abodu's comments have been edited and condensed.