Cantitate/Preț
Produs

The Moth and the Mountain

Autor Ed Caesar
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 16 noi 2020
"An outstanding book." --The Wall Street Journal * "Gripping at every turn." --Outside * "A gem of a book." --The Guardian * "A hell of a ride." --The Times (London) An extraordinary true story about one man's attempt to salve the wounds of war and save his own soul through an audacious adventure. In the 1930s, as official government expeditions set their sights on conquering Mount Everest, a little-known World War I veteran named Maurice Wilson conceives his own crazy, beautiful plan: he will fly a plane from England to Everest, crash-land on its lower slopes, then become the first person to reach its summit--all utterly alone. Wilson doesn't know how to climb. He barely knows how to fly. But he has the right plane, the right equipment, and a deep yearning to achieve his goal. In 1933, he takes off from London in a Gipsy Moth biplane with his course set for the highest mountain on earth. Wilson's eleven-month journey to Everest is wild: full of twists, turns, and daring. Eventually, in disguise, he sneaks into Tibet. His icy ordeal is just beginning. Wilson is one of the Great War's heroes, but also one of its victims. His hometown of Bradford in northern England is ripped apart by the fighting. So is his family. He barely survives the war himself. Wilson returns from the conflict unable to cope with the sadness that engulfs him. He begins a years-long trek around the world, burning through marriages and relationships, leaving damaged lives in his wake. When he finally returns to England, nearly a decade after he first left, he finds himself falling in love once more--this time with his best friend's wife--before depression overcomes him again. He emerges from his funk with a crystalline ambition. He wants to be the first man to stand on top of the world. Wilson believes that Everest can redeem him. This is the tale of an adventurer unlike any you have ever encountered: complex, driven, wry, haunted, and fully alive. He is a man written out of the history books--dismissed as an eccentric, and gossiped about because of rumors of his transvestism. The Moth and the Mountain restores Maurice Wilson to his rightful place in the annals of Everest and tells an unforgettable story about the power of the human spirit in the face of adversity.
Citește tot Restrânge

Preț: 15234 lei

Nou

Puncte Express: 229

Preț estimativ în valută:
2915 3078$ 2426£

Carte indisponibilă temporar

Doresc să fiu notificat când acest titlu va fi disponibil:

Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781501143373
ISBN-10: 1501143379
Pagini: 288
Dimensiuni: 166 x 241 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Simon&Schuster

Notă biografică

Ed Caesaris forty years old. He lives in Manchester, and writes for theNew Yorker. He has won eleven major journalism awards - including a British Press Award, PPA Writer of the Year and the 2014 Foreign Press Award for Journalist of the Year. His subjects have included conflict in central Africa, the world's longest tennis match, stolen art, money-laundering, and the trade in diamonds. His first book,Two Hours,won a Cross Sports Book Award in 2016.

Recenzii

'Ed Caesar has written a slim, ravishing chronicle that isabsolutely bursting with life - doomed romance, the dread of the battlefield, the lure of adventure, hair-raising tales of amateur aviation, and, above all, the beauty and madness of the quest to ascend Earth's tallest summit. Maurice Wilson is as rich and full of surprise and contradiction as a character in a novel, and through painstaking historical research, Caesar brings his hero back to vivid life in all his messy, inspiring, ultimately tragic glory.A major feat of reporting and elegant storytelling'
'The Moth and the Mountainis gripping and exquisite.A mad, magnificent, and moving tale'
'Maurice Wilson was an amazing human being.Passionate, heroic, hilariously deluded, inspired, brave to the point of lunacy, determined, war damaged, lovelorn and gloriously unhinged.The Moth and the Mountainis a wonderful, elegiac account of an extraordinary life written with a wry, compassionate humour. It is clear that Ed Caesar loves his hero. I think I do too'
'The adventurer Maurice Wilson was a forgotten figure until Ed Caesar's brilliantly written book restored him to his rightful place in the annals of exploration... Caesar's book received enormous praise on publication last year and rightly so.This splendid tale is every bit as exciting as any adventure novel and deeply moving'
'This bonkers ripping yarn of derring-don't isa hell of a ride ...scrupulously researched ... Maurice Wilson was a one-off, quite outside the ordinary run of people, andThe Moth and the Mountainisa "sorry, beautiful, melancholy, crazy" tribute to a man who, like a leaf in autumn, burnt brightest just before he fell'
'An urgent and humane story that invites not mockery of a madman, but pity and admiration.A small classic of the biographer's art'
'Caesar is a journalist with a novelist's eye for character ...Wilson's story is bonkers, but also beautiful. The profile Caesar builds iscompelling, colourful and warm- of a complex, contradictory man with admirable self-belief and a healthy disregard for class boundaries and national borders'(Book of the Week)
'A riveting tale of trauma, spiritual awakening and postwar derring-do... a gem of a book ... meticulously researched'(Book of the Week)
'An outstanding book . . .The Moth and the Mountainreturns readers to a romantic era when Everest was terra nova rather than an experience to be bought . . . the author, a contributing writer for theNew Yorker, is a talented storyteller with a flair for detail. . .Wilson's story is an entry less in the annals of mountaineering than in the Book of Life. That such an extraordinary person even existed is cause for celebration'
'A wonderful adventure story, beautifully told.Based on years of painstaking archival research, Ed Caesar'sThe Moth and the Mountainbrings us a modern-day myth with a beguiling, impossible hero from a vanished era of empire, one man on an epic quest that isby turns gripping and heartbreaking'
'The Moth and the Mountainis a gripping story of heroism, adventure, madness and thwarted love, told with extraordinary empathy and intelligence.Ed Caesar is a writer of rare style and depth, and he has written a great and moving work of non-fiction'
'In the 1930s, an Englishman, Maurice Wilson - a traumatized veteran of the Great War - decided he would fly to Mount Everest, crash-land on the slopes and climb to the summit alone. (Never mind that he was a novice pilot and had never climbed a mountain.) It's not a spoiler to say that things didn't go well, butCaesar puts the man, and his quest, in historical context'
'An engrossing biography ...credit to Caesar for rescuing such a splendid tale of an engaging maverick from the footnotes of Everest history.
'Praise is due to Ed Caesar for managing to tell this tale so well, becausethe sheer madness of Wilson's life would surely have thrown off all but the most sure-footed biographer.Caesar sets about it with fantastic energy and makes use of a marvellous collage of letters, diary entries, poetry, telegrams, interviews and archival iced gems.He is to be applauded for giving romantic, adamantine, lion-hearted Maurice Wilson his overdue day in the sun'
'Why climb the world's highest mountain?For King and Country; for the glory of God; because it is there. Or, as for Maurice Wilson, because of an unhappy love affair, a wartime trauma, and a longing to get away from a life whose values are measured at the cash register.In Ed Caesar's telling, the hapless, defiant Wilson becomes an unexpected hero - an unforgettable inspiration for anyone who chafes at the limits of ordinary life'
'Gripping at every turn... it's impossible not to root for Wilson'
'Engagingly depicts Wilson and his times in ebullient and well-written prose ...a widely appealing and affecting character study, microhistory, story of love and loss, and inquiry into some surprising effects of trauma and personal tragedy'
'Riveting...Caesar's biographical tale of Wilson rightly restores a footnoted figure of alpine history to the storied peaks of Mount Everest, where his body lays still today'