Review of The Altitude Journals
Posted: 26 Apr 2022, 13:36
[Following is a volunteer review of "The Altitude Journals" by David J Mauro.]
After personal tragedies, David J. Mauro is at the lowest point in his life. He feels the calling to climb a mountain, not any mountain; he goes on an invitation to climb Denali, one of the mountains listed in the seven summits. David's experience while climbing Denali is eye-opening and reveals answers to problems in his personal life. He returns home with hope. David is adamant that his mountain climbing is over. Not long after arriving home, he felt the call for the next mountain, Kilimanjaro. Returning home, he decides again he is finished because he is not a mountain climber. Time goes by, and again, another mountain calls him, and it continues Elbrus, Aconcagua, Vinson Massif, Carstensz Pyramid, and Everest. For every literal mountain he climbs, he faces a figurative one in his life. Healing and growing to the person who would eventually become the 65th American surviving the seven summits.
On the positive side, this has to be one of the most inspiring books I have ever read. I do not read true-life stories, I find most of them dragging and dull; after reading a few reviews, I knew I had to read this book, and I am glad I did. This book teaches you to face your problems one at a time. And soon those problems will be behind you like forgotten yesterdays. It teaches you that nothing in life is impossible, no matter your age, comforts, or sex. Showing kindness when you put someone else's dreams and goals before your own. The realization that you can have self-doubt and still do what you set out to do.
I cannot find any negative aspects about this book.
David J. Mauro, financial planner, actor, and mountain climber brings us inspiration and hope in The Altitude Journals. Based on his experience of climbing the seven summits, the highest mountains of each of the seven national continents. I find no grammatical errors in this book, and it is fantastically written. I rate this book 4 out of 4.
I would recommend this book to everyone because, in life, everyone needs encouragement, and this is what this book offers. It's the emotional rollercoaster in life that knocks you down. This story is about a person's journey on this rollercoaster and him picking himself up from the lowest point in life and inspiring other people on his journey to do the same. This book has taught me a lot personally, and I hope it will do the same for every person reading it. With very little profanity and no sexual content, this book is for the old and young. And I would recommend this to every reader and non-reader.
******
The Altitude Journals
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon
After personal tragedies, David J. Mauro is at the lowest point in his life. He feels the calling to climb a mountain, not any mountain; he goes on an invitation to climb Denali, one of the mountains listed in the seven summits. David's experience while climbing Denali is eye-opening and reveals answers to problems in his personal life. He returns home with hope. David is adamant that his mountain climbing is over. Not long after arriving home, he felt the call for the next mountain, Kilimanjaro. Returning home, he decides again he is finished because he is not a mountain climber. Time goes by, and again, another mountain calls him, and it continues Elbrus, Aconcagua, Vinson Massif, Carstensz Pyramid, and Everest. For every literal mountain he climbs, he faces a figurative one in his life. Healing and growing to the person who would eventually become the 65th American surviving the seven summits.
On the positive side, this has to be one of the most inspiring books I have ever read. I do not read true-life stories, I find most of them dragging and dull; after reading a few reviews, I knew I had to read this book, and I am glad I did. This book teaches you to face your problems one at a time. And soon those problems will be behind you like forgotten yesterdays. It teaches you that nothing in life is impossible, no matter your age, comforts, or sex. Showing kindness when you put someone else's dreams and goals before your own. The realization that you can have self-doubt and still do what you set out to do.
I cannot find any negative aspects about this book.
David J. Mauro, financial planner, actor, and mountain climber brings us inspiration and hope in The Altitude Journals. Based on his experience of climbing the seven summits, the highest mountains of each of the seven national continents. I find no grammatical errors in this book, and it is fantastically written. I rate this book 4 out of 4.
I would recommend this book to everyone because, in life, everyone needs encouragement, and this is what this book offers. It's the emotional rollercoaster in life that knocks you down. This story is about a person's journey on this rollercoaster and him picking himself up from the lowest point in life and inspiring other people on his journey to do the same. This book has taught me a lot personally, and I hope it will do the same for every person reading it. With very little profanity and no sexual content, this book is for the old and young. And I would recommend this to every reader and non-reader.
******
The Altitude Journals
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon