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Mountaineering in Scotland / Undiscovered Scotland
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About the Author

W. H. Murray was born in Liverpool in 1913, but two years later his father was killed at Gallipoli. The family moved back to Glasgow where Murray spent his childhood, school and college years before beginning a career in banking. He made his first climbs in 1934 and later joined a talented group of climbers in the Junior Mountaineering Club of Scotland. This instigated his lifelong love of Scottish winter climbing, and it was with this set of young innovators that Murray began to undertake the adventures that he eventually transcribed on Red Cross toilet paper as a prisoner of war. After returning to Britain from the camps, Murray once more began to climb with undamaged fervency, and later took part on key Himalayan expeditions of the 1950s. In 1951 Murray was on the critical reconnaissance that established a route up Everest via the Khumbu Icefall by which the summit of Mount Everest would eventually be reached. Marrying happily, Murray built a career as a writer and conservationist, writing Highland Landscape, a counsel of protection for the National Trust of Scotland. Murray died in 1996 and his autobiography, The Evidence of Things not Seen, was published posthumously.

Reviews

'The writing is sublime with descriptions of climbing that come close to the Buddhist idea of 'ahimsa'; the shedding of self. It offers a more complex but satisfying answer to the questions why climb, than Mallory's "because it's there".' (David Rose, The Observer). 'Glory be! A climber's book, and yet a writer's too!' (Geoffrey Winthrop Young).

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