On June 8, 1924, George Mallory and Sandy Irvine left their tiny tent on Mount Everest’s North Col and vanished into mountaineering history. Mallory’s body was discovered in 1999. Irvine’s body, which may bear the elusive camera proving the duo made it to the top, has never been found.
In "Last Hours" author Graham Hoyland ably blends history, botany, geology, biology and mystery into an engaging read while he closes on the $64K question: “What happened to George Mallory and Sandy Irvine? Were they the first to climb Everest?”
Meanwhile, you can almost hear the "chop of the ice axe,” feel the “crunch of crampons” and see “the hiss of breath” in this interesting, informative work. Readers also meet the personalities and details involved in early Everest expeditions, beginning in 1922. Along the way we encounter avalanches, clumsy oxygen packs, Sherpas, and the ever-present cold and frost bite that accompany climbs to the top of the world.
An accomplished mountaineer in his own right, Hoyland is also an Everest summiteer with an adroit sense of humor. Writing about Tibetan yaks, for instance, he says, “Their owners, who are Buddhists, are not supposed to slaughter them for meat, but it is amazing how many fatal accidents they have, and how tasty they are.”
Hoyland also explores the devastating effects of WWI on the elite British alpine climbing corps and the proper pronunciation of the name of the world’s highest mountain. I always thought it was “Eh-ver-est.” Not so, says the author. The Surveyor-General for whom the mountain is named, Sir George Everest, pronounced his name “Eev-rest.” As in Adam and Eve. (Why does that sound weird?)
“Last Hours” may be bit thick for non-climbers or outdoor neophytes, but it’s not insurmountable. The work is thorough and meticulously researched, with boatloads of quotations and citations from primary source material. Includes a chronology, index, and about a million end notes.
An interesting read.