- Paperback: 208 pages
- Publisher: Mountaineers Books (15 Nov 2014)
- Reprint from the original book from 1976
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0898860970
In the late 1800s, when women were bound by cumbersome clothing and strict Victorian scruples, a small band of astonishing women explorers burst forth to claim the adventurous life. Ploughing their way up the Himalaya and Karakoram or trekking for months through tropical lowlands, these five women (three British, one American and one French) conducted an unprecedented exploration of Tibet. Nina Mazuchelli, the first Western woman to see Everest, organised a small expedition from Darjeeling to explore the Eastern Himalaya. Isabella Bird Bishop, bedridden while at home, was always robust on her far-flung, international adventures and wrote nine books chronicling her travels, which brought her to Hawaii, the Rocky Mountains and across Asia into Tibet. Alexandra David-Neel at 56 trekked for eight months and more than 2,000 miles from China to Llasa disguised at a Tibetan beggar. Fanny Bullock Workman, an avowed suffragist, climbed to 21,000 feet in the Karakoram in 1899 and posed with a newspaper whose banner proclaimed Votes for Women . Annie Taylor was a Christian missionary who travelled in Tibetan garb to bring the word of God to the forbidden land of Tibet. The late Lauree Miller was a write, scholar and world traveller whose endeavours ranged from driving huge freight trucks through the unpaved roads of the Alaskan wilderness, to co-founding the International School in Bombay. She passed away on 6th July 1996 at the age of 70.
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