Travel High in the Himalaya

You long for an up-close look at the world’s highest mountain range, but logistics, cost, and a long list of complications stand in your way.

Here is an alternative: Travel with Erika Fatland and her superb book, High, A Journey Across the Himalaya Through Pakistan, India, Bhutan, Nepal, and China.

The acclaimed author, anthropologist, and extreme adventurer from Norway traveled solo by foot, car, train, and plane for eight months, gaining access to riveting stories told by people from virtually every walk of life in all five nations. She stayed in local homes, monasteries, and other places that would intimidate many travelers. Her narrative and conversations will make you feel like you are in the room with her, sipping tea or a stronger drink while you watch and hear the people in the room. I hope you are an adventurous eater.

Everyday life, religion, culture, environment, history, transport, politics, arranged marriages, government, and more. She covers myriad topics effortlessly and expertly. She is warned that she could be in danger as a woman traveling by herself, but she keeps going.

Her experiences in western China captivated me. In Xinjiang, a region with 11 million people, mostly Muslim, she reports that more than a million Uyghurs are in “reeducation camps” while the government encourages Han Chinese to move there. She sees modern apartment buildings in Tibet, inhabited by Han Chinese in the government’s effort to dilute the influence of Buddhism.

She vividly describes the mountains that cut between the Indian subcontinent and the Tibetan Plateau. More than 100 peaks exceed 23,800 feet and many of them are sacred to Buddhists, even off limits for climbers. She wrote the book in Norwegian, leaving Kari Dickson to translate into English.

If reading High tempts you to try a journey to the Himalaya, you will travel armed with a wealth of insights. Or you could remain in your armchair and let Erika Fatland bring the Himalaya to you.

A Himalayan Journey Born as a Dream

Living in her native India, Susan Jagannath fell in love at first sight. She was just 16. But she would have to wait until she was in her 60s to realize her dream, a closeup view of the object of her affection.

In Chasing Himalayan Dreams, Jagannath describes her journey on the Singalila Ridge Trek along the Nepal-India border to Sandakphu, where she gazes across 30 miles of blue sky to Kanchenjunga, the sacred mountain. On the 38-mile guided walk, she travels through villages, soaking up local culture.

The peak she first glimpsed at 16 is not just any mountain. Billed as the world’s tallest until 1852, Kanchenjunga elevation is 28,169 feet. It resides among four of the tallest peaks, including Mt. Everest. And Kanchenjunga has never been summited. By tradition and out of respect for its sacred designation, climbers stop short of its tallest point.

Her book is a quick, easy page-turner. I celebrated when the author, who lives in Australia, climbed to the viewpoint at Sandakphu, at an altitude of 12,100 feet. I had my fingers crossed that clouds would not stand between her and her mountain. If they had, I think Susan Jagannath would not have quit her dream to get a clear look at her first love.