Up and About
The Hard Road to Everest
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Narrated by:
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Saethon Williams
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By:
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Doug Scott
About this listen
At dusk on 24 September 1975, Doug Scott and Dougal Haston became the first Britons to reach the summit of Everest as lead climbers on Chris Bonington's epic expedition to the mountain's immense south-west face.
As darkness fell, Scott and Haston scraped a small cave in the snow 100 metres below the summit and survived the highest bivouac ever - without bottled oxygen, sleeping bags and, as it turned out, frostbite. For Doug Scott, it was the fulfilment of a fortune-teller's prophecy given to his mother: that her eldest son would be in danger in a high place with the whole world watching.
Scott and Haston returned home national heroes with their image splashed across the front pages. Scott went on to become one of Britain's greatest ever mountaineers, pioneering new climbs in the remotest corners of the globe. His career spans the golden age of British climbing from the 1960s boom in outdoor adventure to the new wave of lightweight alpinism throughout the 1970s and 1980s.
In Up and About, the first volume of his autobiography, Scott tells his story from his birth in Nottingham during the darkest days of war to the summit of the world. Surviving the unplanned bivouac without oxygen near the summit of Everest widened the range of what and how he would climb in the future. In fact, Scott established more climbs on the high mountains of the world after his ascent of Everest than before. Those climbs will be covered in the second volume of his life and times.
©2015 Doug Scott (P)2019 Vertebrate PublishingWhat listeners say about Up and About
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Bill Benham
- 02-02-21
a very exciting and absorbing book.
I loved this very exciting book. Doug Scott had a very interesting life and becomes a great hero and philosopher. I also enjoyed the way it was read.
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- Hayley
- 03-01-20
Interesting from beginning to end
Slow starter with a lot of back story but worth sticking with it as it gets more interesting with a great number of stories from a different time of climbing and mountaineering and great achievements.
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- A. J. Lenehan
- 10-06-24
The narrator’s pronunciation is INSANE
Great story, of course. Doug Scott’s climbing career was more important than Bonnington’s. But the voice actor’s efforts to pronounce place names, climbing terms and even people’s names are engagingly absurd. He has style in his voice for sure, but having Doug Scott proof listen would have improved things enormously.
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- travel18
- 13-12-23
what an amazing listen
i thoroughly enjoyed this book of doug scott the adventures around the globe he had taken i dont think he missed any either highly recommended
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- pauljimmyn
- 25-02-21
Too much backstory
An interesting listen on climbing in general. Everest is somewhat a footnote in the story and the early years are long winded. what it does do is highlight the dangers of high altitude climbing.
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