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Contact us for further queries.·Based on extensive interviews with Hawley, celebrated mountaineers, and Kathmandu intimates, and full access to Hawleys meticulous records and correspondence
·Follows the development of Himalayan mountaineering and Nepals entry into the twentieth century
·Details friendships with famed climbers Hillary, Messner, Bonington, Humar, Viesturs, and more
·Foreword by Sir Edmund Hillary, who considers Hawley his closest link in Nepal
One of the most important figures in Himalayan climbing may be someone who has never been to Everest Base Camp, and is not a climber. In 1960, a young American woman, Elizabeth Hawley, moved to Nepal as a reporter for Time Inc. Initially sending home political dispatches from the kingdom, it wasnt long before Hawleys pen found its niche: mountaineering in the worlds highest places. She quickly became part of the Kathmandu scene, socializing regularly with an eclectic group of adventurers, climbers, royalty, politicians and entrepreneurs. Hawley is still in Kathmandu today and has been the unofficial chronicler of every detail of every expedition mounted from Nepal in the Himalaya for more than four decades.
What would motivate this single American woman, the product of a Midwest upbringing, to travel solo during this era to one of the most remote and enigmatic places on the globe? How did she command the respect of climbers from around the world (some of whom report fear of her sharp tongue and rigorous interview style)? How did she remain an authoritative figure for 40 years during the most intense climbing of this regionthe "Golden Era of Himalayan Climbing"? What changes did she see take place in mountaineering and in the political landscape of this region?
Although the intensely private Ms. Hawley is an enigma even to those who know her well, Ill Call You in Kathmandu reveals Hawley as a complex personality, with a rich personal life.
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