Into the Silence

By Wade Davis

Into the Silence - Wade Davis
  • Release Date: 2011-10-18
  • Genre: Biographies & Memoirs
Score: 4
4
From 84 Ratings

Description

The definitive story of the British adventurers who survived the trenches of World War I and went on to risk their lives climbing Mount Everest.

On June 6, 1924, two men set out from a camp perched at 23,000 feet on an ice ledge just below the lip of Everest’s North Col. George Mallory, thirty-seven, was Britain’s finest climber. Sandy Irvine was a twenty-two-year-old Oxford scholar with little previous mountaineering experience. Neither of them returned.
 
Drawing on more than a decade of prodigious research, bestselling author and explorer Wade Davis vividly re-creates the heroic efforts of Mallory and his fellow climbers, setting their significant achievements in sweeping historical context: from Britain’s nineteen-century imperial ambitions to the war that shaped Mallory’s generation. Theirs was a country broken, and the Everest expeditions emerged as a powerful symbol of national redemption and hope. In Davis’s rich exploration, he creates a timeless portrait of these remarkable men and their extraordinary times.

Reviews

  • Terrible, pointless, boring book

    1
    By Lyons_houston
    If you are looking for a book that goes into endless and nonsensical detail of the war, then this is for you. If you want coherent details of climbing a mountain, look else where. Stupid book. I was flipping through entire chapters at a time. Worthless!!
  • Into the silence

    1
    By Skittlel
    Don't waste your time reading this stupidly bloated and pointless book. What sort of moron would endlessly go on about particulars of British trench warfare ad nauseum interspersed with details re Mallory's homosexual habits to no point while avoiding any meaningful insight about Everest dragging the reader through endless crap while he hopes for anything which relates to mountain climbing. I assume the author is an endlessly priggish and anal Brit who can't help himself but even so he's lucky that Mallory's descendants haven't strangled him for dragging their brave and heroic ancestor through such a flatulent and inappropriate pseudo literary mistreatment.
  • Great read!

    5
    By Mtn from Boston
    Couldn't put the book down. Weaves the important events of the era like WWI into the story brilliantly. What those climbers went through was hard to imagine. Strongly recommended.