First-Hand Account from the Epic First Ascent
Sixty years after the first ascent of Mount Everest, this unique book of
letters celebrates, in a very personal way, this most majestic of mountains.
With exclusive access to the private archives of pioneering New Zealand
climber George Lowe, this is a welcome tribute to an unsung hero. The conquest
of Everest in the summer of 1953 was one of the twentieth-century`s greatest
triumphs of exploration. George Lowe`s exploits on the mountain would become
legendary. He was one of the lead climbers, forging the route up Everest`s
Lhotse Face without oxygen, and later cutting steps for his partners up the
summit ridge. In this touching book, a trove of unpublished letters from the
Lowe collection are brought together for the first time, to describe the day-
by-day moments of this historic expedition as never before. In clear and
elegant prose, this is a unique testimony of a superlative human achievement.
GEORGE LOWE was a New Zealand-born explorer, mountaineer, photographer and
filmmaker. He was a leading high-altitude climber on the 1953 British Everest
Expedition, on which his best friend Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay
became the first men to summit the world`s highest peak. As well as taking
photographs throughout this journey, Lowe directed the Oscar-nominated
documentary The Conquest of Everest. He was official photographer of the
Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition, which, between 1955 and 1958, not
only traversed Antarctica but also became the first to reach the South Pole
overland since Captain Scott in 1912. In later years Lowe was the founder and
first Chairman of the Himalayan Trust in Britain. He died on 20 March 2013.