A light through the cracks A climber's story

Beth Rodden

Book - 2024

"Beth Rodden is twenty years old and already an elite rock climber when a climbing excursion in Kyrgyzstan escalates into a nightmare. Beth, her boyfriend, and two other climbers are kidnapped by militant rebels. After six harrowing days of hiding, marching, and dodging gunfire, they miraculously escape captivity. But fear follows Beth home, and pushing past it becomes a fixation. She and her boyfriend, Tommy, train obsessively, achieving rock-climbing greatness and conquering each groundbreaking goal they set, all the while burying the terrors of Kyrgyzstan deep inside. Then comes an unexpected breaking point. For Beth, a woman at the top of her profession, the only way to overcome the anxiety that still controls her is to let go of t...he lifeline she's been clinging to. Blowing up her successful and familiar life, Beth clears a path to a new one--a healthy new normal beyond the anxieties of the past and the myopic pursuit of athletic perfection. Charting a powerful journey of ambition, hope, love, physical and emotional endurance, and the true fulfillment of being oneself, A Light through the Cracks is Beth's story of climbing up and through life" --

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2nd Floor New Shelf 796.522092/Rodden (NEW SHELF) Checked In
Subjects
Genres
autobiographies (literary works)
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Little A [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Beth Rodden (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
287 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781503903814
9781503903791
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A celebrated rock climber retraces the most dangerous trek of her career. In her candid memoir, Rodden vividly recalls a harrowing monthlong hostage situation in Kyrgyzstan in 2000, when she was just 20. The author effectively interweaves the details of the kidnapping into her descriptions of her early life and the post-ordeal aftermath years. A professional at 18, Rodden writes proudly of embracing her youthful obsession with climbing, chronicling her vigorous training and achievement of accolades for her ever-challenging rock climbing exploits. Early in her career, she attracted the attention of pioneer climbers who introduced her to more demanding free-climbing routes. Filled with heavily detailed anecdotes and "climber code" discussions about the more treacherous climbs Rodden has performed, the narrative momentum stems from the author's graphic, riveting depiction of the climbing trip to Kyrgyzstan. Hastily assembled with her then-boyfriend, Tommy, and two others, the adventure, which began as a brisk ascent, soon devolved into a terrorizing nightmare "so far outside anything we'd trained for or understood." After terrorists seized their campsite and took the group hostage, drastic lethal measures were their only option, and Tommy pushed one of their captors off the mountain edge to his death. She and Tommy returned traumatized. "I couldn't show him this darkness," she writes, "could not tell him that I was still braced, every second, for the next threat….I couldn't think, let alone talk, in a coherent way about 'what happened.'" Though Rodden's ambitions became temporarily derailed, she resurfaced, fighting hard against triggering flashbacks to conquer even more impressive feats. Later chapters are equally as frank, offering glimpses into Rodden's exhilarating climbing culture, emotional vulnerabilities, marital turmoil, and steely personal discipline, which continues to ensure her survival. A dramatic account of an international ordeal that nearly upended the career of a fearless young rock climber. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.