Don Whillans has an iconic significance for generations of climbers. His epochmaking first ascent of Annapurna's South Face, achieved with Dougal Haston in 1970, remains one of the most impressive climbs ever made, a standard to which all modern Himalayan climbers aspire - but behind this and all his other formidable achievements lies a tough, recalcitrant reality: the character of the man himself. At twenty, Whillans was 5 foot 4 inches tall, a working-class lad with the build of a miniature Atlas. W reputations of great ...
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Don Whillans has an iconic significance for generations of climbers. His epochmaking first ascent of Annapurna's South Face, achieved with Dougal Haston in 1970, remains one of the most impressive climbs ever made, a standard to which all modern Himalayan climbers aspire - but behind this and all his other formidable achievements lies a tough, recalcitrant reality: the character of the man himself. At twenty, Whillans was 5 foot 4 inches tall, a working-class lad with the build of a miniature Atlas. W reputations of great skill and daring on the one hand, and as a hell-raiser, a scrapper and a savage-tongued wit on the other - the Villain of the title, who was turned down for a Queen's Birthday Honour because of a violent fracas with several policemen. His world was miles away from the conventional public-school environment of the upper-class climbers who had for so long dominated the sport, and this itself led to tensions throughout his life. Whillans carried within himself a sense of personal invincibility, forceful, direct and uncompromising. It gave him sporting superstar status - the flawed heroism of a Best, a McEnroe, an Ali. In his own circle, his image was the working class hero on the rock-face, laconic and bellicose, ready to go to war with the elements or with any human who crossed his path on a bad day.
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Seller's Description:
F in F jacket. F/F. 8vo. original black boards gilt in dustwrapper priced £18.99; pp. xiv, 354, with illustrations. Number Line 5 7 9 10 8 6. A fine copy. Joint winner of the 2005 Boardman-Tasker Prize for Mountain Literature.
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Seller's Description:
F in F jacket. F/F. 8vo. original black boards gilt in dustwrapper priced £18.99; pp. xiv, 354, with illustrations. Number line 1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2. A fine copy. Joint winner of the 2005 Boardman-Tasker Prize for Mountain Literature.
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Seller's Description:
F in F jacket. Signed by Author. F/F. 8vo. original black boards gilt in dustwrapper priced £18.99; pp. xiv, 354, with illustrations. Number line 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2. A fine copy. Joint winner of the 2005 Boardman-Tasker Prize for Mountain Literature. Flatsigned on title page by the author, Jim Perrin.
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Seller's Description:
F- in F jacket. Signed by Author. F-/F. 8vo. original black boards gilt (slight bruise to top edge) in dustwrapper priced £18.99; pp. xiv, 354, with illustrations. Number line 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2. A near fine copy, otherwise as new. Joint winner of the 2005 Boardman-Tasker Prize for Mountain Literature. Flatsigned on title page by Jim Perrin, and additionally by Dennis Gray, long term Whillans associate from the Rock and Ice years.
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Seller's Description:
F in F jacket. Signed by Author. F/F. 8vo. original black boards gilt (trifling lean to spine) in dustwrapper priced £18.99; pp. xiv, 354, with illustrations. Number line 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2. A fine copy. Joint winner of the 2005 Boardman-Tasker Prize for Mountain Literature. Flatsigned on the title page by the author 'Jim Perrin', and the climber most closely associated with Don Whillans, 'Joe Brown'. Together Brown and Whillans revolutionised British climbing with a string of hard first ascents in the 1950s.