Everest 24 New views on the 1924 Mount Everest expedition

Book - 2024

In 1924, the twelve men of the British Mount Everest expedition arrived in Tibet, intending to be the first to summit the world's highest peak. They recruited indigenous Himalayans as porters and guides, setting up base camps along the mountain. During the final ascent attempt, climbers George Mallory and Andrew Irvine disappeared, and were last spotted only 800 feet from the summit. While Mallory's body was discovered in 1999--without the camera he was given to photograph the summit--Irvine's body has never been found. Everest 24 casts a new light on this famous expedition. Leading experts examine the British fascination with Everest, which they deemed the "Third Pole'" present the history of the previous atte...mpts, the 1924 journey, and its aftermath; relay Mallory and Irvine's final known hours; spotlight the stories of indigenous Himalayans; and provide fresh perspectives on the cultural and ecological meanings of the mountain. Never published and rarely seen images from the collection of the Royal Geographical Society--which, along with the Alpine Club of London, sponsored the 1924 climb--bring the expedition to life, along with hand-colored lantern slides and film stills and the artefacts discovered with George Mallory's body.

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796.522/Everest
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2nd Floor New Shelf 796.522/Everest (NEW SHELF) Due Oct 18, 2024
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Review by Booklist Review

On the centennial of the ill-fated 1924 attempt to conquer Mount Everest, Smithsonian Books and Tenzing, vice president of the American Himalayan Foundation, have pulled together an impressive compendium of stunning black-and-white and colorized photos from the expedition, accompanied by numerous short, modern-day essays by leading experts, to give an intimate yet fulsome account. Foremost, respect is paid to the accompanying local sherpas and porters, who bore the prodigious weight not only of supplies but also translation, which included highly sensitive negotiations with local authorities for passage over sacred ground to the 29,029-foot peak. The book also touches on the technologies of the time--from photography to oxygen containers to clothing--along with the sometimes over-the-top marketing needed to secure funding for the expedition. And it asks the long-tantalizing question: Did expedition members George Mallory and Andrew Irvine, who died in their last-ditch effort to climb the final 800 feet to the summit, make it?

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.