Contains nearly 700 mini-biographies of climbers (many dead, some alive) – the
romantics, eccentrics and buffoons that have made British climbing what it is:
dissolute and hungover most of the time, with the odd unexpected burst of
brilliance.
They form a world-class cast of eccentrics ranging from the most virtuous to
the most hedonistically barbarous characters one could ever hope to meet.
Indeed, an appropriate alternative title for this tome might be The Good, The
Bad and The Ugly. But which are which?
At one end of the moral spectrum we have Archdeacon Hudson Stuck solemnly tutoring his native charges on ecclesiastical history while making the first ascent of Denali.
At the other there’s Satan-loving Aleister Crowley pleasuring himself in his tent on Kangchenjunga while his helpless avalanched companions were crying for help a few yards away. In between are the usual sprinkling of psychotic nut jobs consummate show-offs and infuriatingly brilliant athletes.The selection of folk gracing the pages has been anything but scientifically objective. The intention has been to include anyone who was born in Britain who happ