Alone on the Wall

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Alone on the Wall
Lone climber without ropes, wearing red shirt, climbing a granite crack, trees and valley floor visible below him.
Cover of extended edition released in 2018
AuthorAlex Honnold
David Roberts
LanguageEnglish
GenreMemoir
PublisherW. W. Norton & Company
Publication date
November 9, 2015
Media typePrint
Pages256 pp (first edition)
336 pp (extended edition)
ISBN9780393247626
Websitehttps://www.alexhonnold.com/aloneonthewall#book

Alone on the Wall is a 2015 memoir by Alex Honnold and David Roberts, covering Honnold's rise to fame as a rock climber, particularly his free solo climbs of big walls, and his environmental activism. In 2018, an extended edition was published, with additional chapters written by Honnold about his June 2017 free solo climb of El Capitan, which was called "the greatest feat of pure rock climbing in the history of the sport" by National Geographic.[1] The book was praised by reviewers for its descriptions of climbing and dual-voice structure.

Half the book is written by Honnold (his sections are denoted in italics), recollecting his climbs along with his old logbook notes. The other half is written by David Roberts, an accomplished climber and author, who offers commentary on Honnold's life and achievements, background for his most significant climbs, and notes from interviews with Honnold's family and climbing partners.

The book starts with Honnold's free solo climb of Moonlight Buttress, a 1,200-foot sandstone cliff in Zion National Park, on April 1, 2008. At the time, Honnold was 22 years old and unknown outside the climbing community. Later that year, he free soloed the Regular Northwest Face of Half Dome, a 2,000-foot wall in Yosemite Valley. These two solo climbs, both unprecedented, launched him to wider fame; a film covering his Half Dome achievement (also titled Alone on the Wall) and a 60 Minutes interview were released shortly after.

As Honnold became more famous, he gained opportunities to climb in more remote locations, such as Mount Kinabalu in Borneo or the Ennedi Plateau in Chad, and to collaborate with notable mountaineers including Conrad Anker and Mark Synnott. Honnold continued to attempt ambitious projects in Yosemite, such as setting the speed record on the Nose route of El Capitan with Hans Florine and completing the "Yosemite Triple Crown"free climbing El Capitan, Half Dome, and Mount Watkins with Tommy Caldwell in under 24 hours. Honnold and Caldwell also completed the first full traverse of the Fitz Roy range in Patagonia in 2014.

Throughout the book, Honnold also discusses climate change and his desire to reduce carbon emissions by avoiding unnecessary travel. After gaining sponsorships and more income, he created The Honnold Foundation to help expand solar energy projects around the world.

Background and release

Reception

References

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