Jeff Smoot begins his latest book, titled听All and Nothing: Inside Free Soloing, by describing a moment in the mid-1980s when his life nearly came to an end. Back then, Smoot was one of America鈥檚 strongest climbers; he wasn鈥檛 uber-elite like Lynn Hill or Todd Skinner, but he was deep in the scene, a regular contributor to magazines like Climbing and Mountain, strong enough to send routes near the top of the grade scale, and solid enough to go tandem soloing with the likes of Peter Croft. Counterintuitively, however, it was these exact facts鈥攖hat he was strong, that he was solid, and that other people seemed to know it鈥攖hat nearly killed him.
He was out soloing one day in Leavenworth, Washington, when climber Peter Croft, as Smoot writes, 鈥渟tarted up behind me, climbing directly below me as I pulled through a 5.10 crux. If I had fallen, I would have knocked him off the wall. My ego swelled. If Peter Croft had that much confidence in my ability, I must be pretty good.鈥
That same afternoon, bolstered by his experience with Croft, Smoot redpointed a gently overhanging 5.12 crack with ease鈥攕o much ease, in fact, that another friend jokingly said, 鈥淵ou could solo it.鈥
The remark haunted Smoot. 鈥淭hat night I drew up a diagram of the crack in my journal and wrote detailed notes describing each jam, each foothold, each sequence of moves,鈥 he writes. 鈥淚t became an obsession. You could solo it became You will.鈥
So he tried it. And shortly after passing the point of no return, the point at which the moves he鈥檇 executed were too hard for him to down climb, his foot slipped. He swung away from the wall but managed to hold on and snipe his feet back on the footholds. Having no other option, he continued upward鈥攐nly to have his feet cut yet again. This time he barely held the swing.
When he topped out, he felt ill. 鈥淭he stark reality of what I had just done overwhelmed me,鈥 he writes. 鈥淚 had gotten away with something, barely pulled it off. I realized, with absolute clarity, that if I didn鈥檛 quit free soloing, I was going to end up dead at the bottom of a cliff.鈥
Within a year Smoot 鈥済ot married, started a career, had a kid.鈥 But then? Well, then he found out that 鈥渋t鈥檚 hard to quit. It gnaws at you.鈥 Just a few years after ostensibly quitting forever, he found himself regularly free soloing once more.
But why? Why wager your life against a piece of rock? Why risk leaving your kids without a parent? Why does 鈥渢he impulse to climb rocks without a rope鈥 constitute, for so many climbers, 鈥渢he strongest [impulse] in their life鈥?
These are the questions that Smoot explores his new book, which is worth your attention.听
As in his previous book, titled Hangdog Days,听All and Nothing contains elements of memoir. But these short sections function as decoration in a wide-ranging and painstakingly researched investigation into free soloing鈥檚 history, psychology, philosophy, morality, and cultural significance.
The result is both fascinating and exhaustive.
In addition to covering nearly every famous (or accidentally infamous) modern soloist*, Smoot鈥檚 inquiry brings us to the world鈥檚 oldest known rock climb (the Thamudic Route on Jebel Rum, in Jordan鈥檚 Wadi Rum) where the presumed first climbers, presumably free soloing, 鈥渃arved their names into the rock more than two thousand years ago.鈥 He takes us to St. Kilda, in the Outer Hebrides, where the endemic community of 鈥渂ird snatchers鈥 often roamed rope less up and down the sea cliffs, gathering the puffin eggs that played a crucial role in their diets. He describes climbing鈥檚 ritualized role on the island of Rapa Nui, a.k.a. Easter Island, where climbing (alongside other feats of bravery) replaced clan warfare as a way of electing tribal leaders. He walks us through the role of soloing from mountaineering鈥檚 golden age in the late 18th century to the early decades of the 20th century, introducing us to folks like Walter P. Haskett-Smith, who 鈥渧iewed climbers who used ropes and equipment as incompetents,鈥 and Georges Whinkler, who was perhaps the world鈥檚 first trust fund climbing bum, and Austria鈥檚 Paul Preuss, who was 鈥渁 genuine madman,鈥 according to his rivals, and 鈥渧iewed pitons as unnecessary, even for safety, and as cheating when used as aid.鈥 (After Preuss helped kick off the great piton debate of 1911, he fell 鈥渧ictim to his own theories,鈥 as a German paper put it, taking a thousand-footer off the North Ridge of Mandlkogel, in Austria.)
And that鈥檚 just part one of a five-part book.听听
*Does he write about Alex Honnold? Check. Peter Croft? Check. Dean Potter? Henry Barber? Steph Davis? Michael Reardon? Russ Clune? Mark Twight? Marc-Andr茅 Leclerc? Hazel Findlay? Jimmy Jewel? Dan Osman? John Long? John Bachar? Basically everyone else? Check, check, check, check, check. (Etc.)听
In later sections he writes about sociologist Stephen Lyng鈥檚 鈥渆dgework鈥 theory, which explores the relationship between self-sufficiency and risk-taking and 鈥渢he feeling of alienation brought about by dull working conditions stemming from class immobility.鈥 Quoting climbers like Mark Twight and Margo Talbot, he writes about why exactly most free soloists 鈥渨ill tell you that the ability to control fear, to control their emotional response to it鈥 is at the core of why they climb, and why they free solo.鈥 He analyzes the drive to risk your life through the prism of Mazlow鈥檚 hierarchy, which states that once basic human needs like food, water, and shelter are met, other less tangible needs like belongingness and self-esteem begin to feel fundamentally important. And he writes about the relationship between risk-taking and Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi鈥檚 concept of 鈥渇low,鈥 which in turn has roots in samurai warrior culture鈥攁 tradition that influenced climbers like Dan Osman and Alex Honnold and Arno Ilgner (author or The Rock Warrior鈥檚 Way).
Smoot鈥檚 encyclopedic impulse, while certainly educational, also serves as a distancing process. Whereas the narrative of Hangdog Days was ultimately tied together by the various characters engaged in鈥攐r trying to inhibit鈥攖he quest for 5.14, All and Nothing has no such simple structure; instead it鈥檚 a sweeping (some might say disordered) survey of free soloing and free soloists and people who鈥檝e written about or studied the practice. The book is chock full of amazing anecdotes, insightful quotes, and a wide variety of conflicting opinions about why people solo and whether it鈥檚 right and how the pursuit鈥檚 effects extend beyond the participants themselves, impacting family members, friends, and impressionable members of the next generation. Yet the book ultimately feels more like a collage than a narrative, more like an introductory textbook (oh the pop quizzes one could make!) than an intentionally literary inquiry of the sort that might convince someone to feel one way or another about the practice.
Don鈥檛 get me wrong, though. This isn鈥檛 necessarily an indictment. In fact, Smoot is kind of the anti-Malcolm Gladwell in a very refreshing sense; his book is not a neat collation of stats and stories in support of a premeditated and minimally considered thesis. Instead, he seems to have no thesis鈥攏o stance he鈥檚 trying to prove鈥攐ther than to honestly and exhaustively ask why the act of risking your life in order to climb a rock can mean everything to the people who do it while also鈥攐bjectively鈥攎eaning absolutely nothing.
Rather than engaging in defense or condemnation, Smoot just gathers the data, the anecdotes, the disparate slew of opinions about the sport, and gives the patient reader room to evaluate their own feelings. He doesn鈥檛 stray from recording the grisly ends that soloists sometimes meet (he writes about literally dozens of soloists who鈥檝e fallen; some walked away unscathed; others never walked again; others died). Nor does he avoid celebrating the value that so many soloists take from the act, despite his acknowledgement that reporting on soloing鈥檚 life-affirming aspects might convince more people to take up the practice. Smoot consults the work of researchers who believe that soloists solo because they鈥檙e depressed and broken, pouring through climbing鈥檚 history (and his own) to support this fact. But he also consults researchers who argue that soloists solo because they know, however intuitively, that this type of flow-state mortal awareness enriches their lives, and he finds instances from his past (and climbing鈥檚 history) that support this too. He profiles fathers who don鈥檛 quite know how to talk to their kids about soloing. He profiles soloists who fell, lived, and regret it鈥攋ust as he profiles soloists who fell, lived, and got right back on the horse.
Surveys, as a structure, come at the expense of depth. As I read All and Nothing, I was delighted by the diversity of stories and opinions I encountered. But I also found myself wondering whether a more focused investigation might have yielded a more satisfying and less frenetic inquiry than this one, in which dozens of soloists and writers and psychologists each receive one- or two-page treatments. But I am still very happy to have read it.
All in all: A fascinating and maniacally thorough inquiry that mistakes breadth for depth but nonetheless serves as an excellent resource for anyone interested in the history and psychology of free soloing.