.com Review
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The issue will shortly be decided. The third time we walk up East Rongbuk Glacier will be the last, for better or
worse.
George Mallory wrote those words in May 1924, just days before he and Andrew "Sandy" Irvine made their final attempt to
summit Everest. They disappeared on June 8, 1924, and mystery has swirled around them ever since. Did they reach
the summit, 29 years before Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary?
The recovery of Mallory's body in May 1999 provoked more questions than it answered. Clearly Mallory fell and then died
of exposure. But was he on his way up or down? David Breashears (
/exec/obidos/exact-author=Breashears%2c%20David/%24%7B0%7D ) (of IMAX Everest fame) and aineering historian Audrey
Salkeld ( /exec/obidos/exact-author=Salkeld%2c%20Audrey/%24%7B0%7D ) devote a thoughtful chapter to the discovery,
examining the clues found with Mallory and speculating on his experiences on that eful day. As is to be expected,
however, Breashears and Salkeld leave it to others (including Conrad Anker (
/exec/obidos/exact-author=Anker%2c%20Conrad/%24%7B0%7D ) and Jochen Hemmleb (
/exec/obidos/exact-author=Hemmleb%2c%20Jochen/%24%7B0%7D )) to make conclusions; their book is about much more than
Mallory's disappearance. Last Climb is an affectionate biography of Mallory, his fellow climbers, and their three
Everest expeditions. Diaries and letters written by expedition members bring their voices into the present, while the
authors' considerable Everest expertise ensures historical accuracy. Dozens of vintage photographs taken by Mallory and
the other expedition members illustrate the text, revealing a time when "gentlemen aineers climbed in leather boots
and tweeds"--their gear better suited to a bright day in the Scottish highlands than the slopes of Everest.
The morbid-minded may be disappointed that the only photograph of Mallory's remains is of his hobnailed boot, but
others may see this as a mark of respect for the great climber. Beautifully presented and carefully written, Last Climb
is easily the classiest book on the Mallory mystery. --Sunny Delaney
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From Publishers Weekly
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Completing the trio of new books on George Mallory (see Ghosts of Everest and Lost on Everest, above), this
breathtakingly illustrated volume unfolds as a vivid, engaging pictorial documentary, offering an incredible armchair
adventure on the roof of the world. Spectacular color and black-and-white photographs from Mallory's expeditions and
from the 1999 search distinguish this volume, capturing the grandeur and almost unearthly beauty of the Himalayan
heights. When Mallory and Andrew Irvine vanished at the top of the world in 1924, team member Noel Odell, the last
person to see the two men alive, reported that they were ascending the Second Step, an epment just 800 feet from the
summit. Odell later suggested that the duo might have been on the much lower First Step, and historians have debated the
question ever since. IMAX filmmaker and Everest veteran Breashears (High Exposure, Forecasts, Apr. 26) and
aineering historian Salkeld (Climbing Everest, etc.) believe it's unlikely that Mallory and Irvine reached
the Second Step and concur with the authors of the other two books that the question of whether the duo reached the
summit remains unresolved. The spectacular photographs are accompanied by a perceptive probe of Mallory the man, an
Edwardian idealist who threw off the shackles of Victorian restraint yet remained torn between herly duty (he left
his wife and three children for long periods) and his sense of mission as "a child of Empire... conscious of what
England expected." Included also are a poignant introduction by John Mallory, the explorer's son, who pays tribute to
the her he hardly knew, as well as a brief essay by George Mallory II (John's son), who reached Everest's summit in
1995, symbolically completing his grandher's quest. BOMC selection. (Oct.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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