Downward Bound is Warren Harding\'s offbeat and inventive Climbing classic.
In Rock Climbing it\'s not really necessary to reach a summit; the game seems to amount to finding the most difficult ways of getting nowhere..
In basic mountain Climbing the object is to reach the summit by any or the easiest route possible.
Rock Climbing is especially questionable in this respect.
Like, "We climb because it\'s there and we\'re mad " How else could you explain freezing your ass off, battling heat and thirst, scaring yourself to death just to get up some Rock face or mountain peak.
Excpert: Why do people climb? How the hell do I know? Answers to this perennial question range from Mallory\'s rather facetious (I think) "Because it\'s there" to (again) Mallory\'s enigmatic "If you ask the question, there can be no answer." Personally, I dig another version of Mallory\'s statement.
Downward Bound is a testament to the rebellious and magnetic Batso.
And throughout he strives to return some of the fun to Climbing through humorous story telling of the Climbing culture of the 60s and 70s.
The tales of his ascents are vivid.
The introduction to Rock Climbing and big walls is farcical.
Harding gives readers an introduction to Climbing and recounts his first ascents of the Nose and the Wall of the Early Morning Light on El Capitan in Yosemite Valley.
Downward Bound is Warren Harding\'s offbeat and inventive Climbing classic