Chomolungma Sings the Blues Chomolungma Sings the Blues

Chomolungma Sings the Blues

Travels Round Everest

    • 3,99 €
    • 3,99 €

Descrizione dell’editore

If there is one mountain that is known across the whole world, it must be the highest - Everest. To the people who live at its feet she is Chomolungma, Goddess Mother of the World. The disappearance of George Mallory and Andrew Irvine close to the summit in 1924 lent the mountain a tragic romanticism, of young men risking everything for a dream. When Norgay Tenzing and Ed Hillary became the first men to stand on the summit in 1953, it was the crowning glory for the coronation of Elizabeth II.

But nearly fifty years on, there are scores of ascents nearly every season. There are stories of bodies and heaps of garbage abandoned on the slopes, of the loss of cultural identity among the Sherpas and Tibetans who live at the foot of Everest. Ed Douglas spent parts of 1995 and 1996 travelling in Nepal and Tibet, talking to politicians and environmentalists, to mountaineers and local people. He found a poor region struggling to develop, and encountering environmental problems far greater than rubbish left by climbers. Local people are resourceful and cultured, reliant on the work the mountaineers and the mountain provide, but striving to find a balance between the new and the old.

GENERE
Viaggi e avventura
PUBBLICATO
2014
11 dicembre
LINGUA
EN
Inglese
PAGINE
224
EDITORE
Little, Brown Book Group
DIMENSIONE
1,2
MB

Altri libri di Ed Douglas

Tenzing, le héros de l'Everest Tenzing, le héros de l'Everest
2023
The Magician's Glass The Magician's Glass
2017
Statement Statement
2015
Himalaya Himalaya
2022
Himalaya Himalaya
2020
Regions of the Heart Regions of the Heart
2019