Publisher's Synopsis
The unrivalled scenery of the Alps attracts increasing numbers of visitors every year, while for those who seek the more active and dangerous pursuits of climbing and skiing, the region offers unique opportunities.
A distinguished historian of mountaineering who knows the Alps from end to end, Ronald Clark describes the history of the mountains and their most famous peaks. The heroic story of their exploration, first by scientists, then by such early mountaineers as Whymper, Coolidge, Miss Brevoort and their guides, is related with extensive quotations from letters, diaries and contemporary records.
Ronald Clark explores the development of the Alps as a mountain health centre, the coming of roads and railways and the growth of the winter sports industry and warns that the mountains, like a Highland deer forest, can carry only a certain number of living creatures without facing disaster.
The book is lavishly illustrated with 32 pages of colour plates and approximately 120 black and white photographs, mostly from the author's own collection, as well as detailed maps.