The extraordinary life of the beekeeper who climbed Everest
Edmund Hillary: A Biography is the story of the New Zealand beekeeper who
climbed Mount Everest. A man who against expedition orders drove his tractor
to the South Pole; a man honoured around the world for his pioneering climbs
yet who collapsed on more than one occasion on a mountain, and a man who gave
so much to Nepal yet lost his family to its mountains.
The author, Michael Gill, was a close friend of Hillary’s for nearly 50 years,
accompanying him on many expeditions and becoming heavily involved in
Hillary’s aid work building schools and hospitals in the Himalaya. During the
writing of this book, Gill was granted access to a large archive of private
papers and photos that were deposited in the Auckland museum after Hillary’s
death in 2008. Building on this unpublished material, as well as his extensive
personal experience, Michael Gill profiles a man whose life was shaped by both
triumph and tragedy.
Gill describes the uncertainties of the first 33 years of Hillary’s life,
during which time he served in the New Zealand air force during the Second
World War, as well as the background to the first ascent of Mount Everest in
1953, when Hillary and Tenzing Norgay became the first climbers to reach the
summit – a feat that brought the pair instant worldwide fame.
He reveals the loving relationship Hillary had with his wife Louise, in part
through their touching letters to each other. Her importance to him during
their 22 years of marriage only underlines the horror of her death, along with
that of their youngest daughter, Belinda, in a plane crash in 1975. Hillary
eventually pulled out of his subsequent depression to continue his life’s work
in the Himalaya. Affectionate, but scrupulously fair, in Edmund Hillary: A
Biography Michael Gill has gone further than anyone before to reveal the
humanity of this remarkable man.