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Gipfel der Götter 01: Bergsteiger-Saga in 5 Bänden

von Jiro Taniguchi (Illustrator), Baku Yumemakura (Autor)

Weitere Autoren: Siehe Abschnitt Weitere Autoren.

Reihen: Gipfel der Götter (1)

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
1856148,361 (4.08)10
"'Because it's there.' George Herbert Leigh Mallory is said to have given this in reply to the question 'Why do you want to climb Mt. Everest?' On his third expedition in June 1924, Mallory and his climbing partner, Andrew Irvine, disappeared on the North-East ridge during their ascent, having been sighted only a few hundred metres from the summit. In 1993, in a small Nepalese store, Makoto Fukamachi, photographer for a Japanese expedition to conquer Mt Everest, stumbles across an old camera -- a Vest Pocket Autographic Kodak Special. Could it be Mallory's camera? Did it hold the secret of whether Mallory and Irvine made it to the summit?"--Publisher's web site.… (mehr)
  1. 00
    In der Todeszone von Tom Holzel (villemezbrown)
    villemezbrown: The Mystery of Mallory & Irvine is cited and pictured on pages 59 and 67 of The Summit of the Gods, Volume 1.
  2. 00
    In eisige Höhen: Das Drama am Mount Everest von Jon Krakauer (villemezbrown)
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Densely written and illustrated, yet highly immersive and readable. Both the writing and illustration are masterful; the tone is very noir, almost Lynchian in some aspects. I have a strange fascination with mountaineering/rock climbing stories and this one did not disappoint. I'm going to have to hunt down more volumes. ( )
  bmanglass | Aug 31, 2023 |
UN'ALTRA CIMA di Jiro Taniguchi

La montagna era interamente ricoperta di neve.
Il mio respiro bianco.

Procedevo lentamente, senza preoccupazioni...

Avevo le racchette, ma la neve arrivava fino alle ginocchia. Non c'era traccia del passagggio di altre persone. Nessuna impronta di animali.
Da tempo non mi sentivo cosi' libero.

Alzai gli occhi verso il cielo. Un blu limpido e lontano...

La neve scendeva leggera, come tracciata da un pennello. Vidi un uccello. Solo la sua silhouette, forse era un'aquila... solcava il vento tracciando ampi cerchi, probabilmente in cerca di una preda sul pendio innevato.

E guardandola divenni io stesso aquila. In volo, libero dalla forza di gravita'. Vidi le alpi come lei le aveva sempre viste. Un magnifico intreccio argentato... Il bianco iridescente della neve mi abbaglio' per un istante.

Le montagne innevate sono uno spettacolo stupendo e maestoso.

Mi voltai e scorsi una foresta di conifere. Nel silenzio, tesi le orecchie. Aguzzai la vista. Qualcosa si muoveva ai margini della foresta, era bianco, un bianco abbagliante che si confondeva con quello della neve. Una lepre bianca... ( )
  NewLibrary78 | Jul 22, 2023 |
I first read this book about a decade ago when the series was originally released (and may have it somewhere down in my basement) but did not have a chance to get the subsequent volumes. I now have all five on hand from the library and am ready to binge.

What I mostly remembered about this book over the intervening years is the artwork. Taniguchi magically transforms little comic book panels into IMAX screens, hanging you off the side of the world's highest mountains.

While the dialogue is a bit stiff, and this volume has several proofreading errors, the story does a pretty good job of living up to the art. In the 1990s we follow a photojournalist, Makoto Fukamachi, who thinks he may have stumbled across a clue in Kathmadu, Nepal, that could help solve the mysterious disappearance of George Mallory and Sandy Irvine during the 1924 British Mount Everest expedition. As he investigates, Fukumachi crosses paths with a mysterious and legendary Japanese mountain climber of the 1970s and '80s named Jouji Habu, who may be key to breaking the case.

The book is filled multiple literal cliffhangers as we follow Habu's early career and watch his obsessiveness drive him to spectacular heights while his bluntness alienates him from his fellow mountaineers. ( )
  villemezbrown | Feb 16, 2019 |
The Summit of the Gods, Volume 1 is the first book in a five-volume manga series written by Baku Yumemakura and illustrated by Jiro Taniguchi. The series is based on Yumemakura's award-winning novel The Summit of the Gods published in 1997. The manga adaptation of The Summit of the Gods is an award-winner in its own right, too. A nominee and finalist for numerous awards, The Summit of the Gods manga took home a Japan Media Arts Excellence Award in 2001 and an Angoulême Prize for Artwork in 2005. The Summit of the Gods, Volume 1 was first released in Japan in 2000. The English-language edition was published in 2009 Fanfare/Ponent Mon. The series has also been translated into French and German, among other languages. I first encountered Yumemakura and Taniguchi's The Summit of the Gods during the Jiro Taniguchi Manga Moveable Feast. It easily became my favorite collaborative work by Taniguchi.

In 1924, George Mallory and Andrew Irvine climbed Mount Everest in an attempt to become the first men to stand on the mountain's peak. The two men disappeared during the climb, never to return. Whether or not they reached the summit remains a mystery. Nearly seven decades later, Makoto Fukamachi, a Japanese photographer on another failed Everest expedition, discovers a camera in a shady back alley shop in Kathmandu matching the make and model of the one carried by Mallory on his final ascent. In his search for more information about the camera, Fukamachi encounters Jouji Habu, an aloof, legendary Japanese mountain climber who hasn't been heard from in years. What started out as an interest in the camera evolves into an interest in Habu himself. Fukamachi feels compelled to learn all that he can about Habu, his reason for being in Nepal, and his connection to the camera. His search for answers leads him from Nepal back to Japan where he seeks out those who, for better or for worse, personally knew Habu.

The artwork in The Summit of the Gods is stunning, often bordering on photorealistic. I am not at all surprised that the series has won awards for Taniguchi's art. Perhaps most striking is the depiction of the mountains themselves. Only small portions of them can ever be seen at any given time, but there is a sense that the mountains continue on far beyond the edges of the page. Taniguchi expertly captures the mountains' massive presence in The Summit of the Gods. This is critical since they are such an important part of the story. The artwork's realism also extends to the mountaineering gear and climbing equipment. Taniguchi pay s very close attention to accuracy and details. Every time the climbers attempt an ascent they are risking their lives. It's difficult to forget this when Taniguchi shows that the only things keeping them "safe" are a rope and a handful of pitons. A single misstep or equipment failure could mean a climber's death.

Much like Fukamachi, Habu absolutely fascinates me. He is by far the most developed character in The Summit of the Gods, Volume 1. This is understandable since he's the subject of such an intense investigation. Habu is revealed to be an extremely passionate man and is frequently described as a climbing genius. It is that genius and seriousness that drives rifts between him and his fellow climbers. Socially, he is extremely brash and awkward. It is not until well into the first volume of The Summit of the Gods that a softer side of Habu is seen when Buntarou Kishi, a young climber who greatly admires Habu, is introduced. As unlikeable as Habu can be, I still find his story to be a compelling one. He keeps his distances and doesn't express himself well, he's blunt and insensitive, but he's also honest and fervent. His characterization is exceptionally well done. I have now read The Summit of the Gods, Volume 1 several times and I still find it to be a tremendous and breathtaking work.

Experiments in Manga ( )
2 abstimmen PhoenixTerran | Oct 19, 2012 |
keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen

» Andere Autoren hinzufügen

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Taniguchi, JiroIllustratorHauptautoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Yumemakura, BakuAutorHauptautoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Rebiersch, ReselÜbersetzerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt

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Wikipedia auf Englisch (1)

"'Because it's there.' George Herbert Leigh Mallory is said to have given this in reply to the question 'Why do you want to climb Mt. Everest?' On his third expedition in June 1924, Mallory and his climbing partner, Andrew Irvine, disappeared on the North-East ridge during their ascent, having been sighted only a few hundred metres from the summit. In 1993, in a small Nepalese store, Makoto Fukamachi, photographer for a Japanese expedition to conquer Mt Everest, stumbles across an old camera -- a Vest Pocket Autographic Kodak Special. Could it be Mallory's camera? Did it hold the secret of whether Mallory and Irvine made it to the summit?"--Publisher's web site.

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