Seven Years in Tibet - 1953
by Harrer, Heinrich
- Used
- Hardcover
Description
Standard delivery: 8 to 15 days
Details
- Title Seven Years in Tibet
- Author Harrer, Heinrich
- Condition Used - 3rd impression VG no dw
- Publisher Rupert Hart-Davis
- Date 1953
- Bookseller's Inventory # H00037
About Bob Worth Mountain Books North Yorkshire, United Kingdom
I am a private collector (also a fell runner, skier & mountaineer) who, after collecting Mountaineering and Travel books for almost 50 years, now need to start shifting some of the collection due to space constrictions.
Customers are invited to contact me if they would like more information about a particular book or a photograph(s). I always try to be accurate. If an error in description is made, I will refund the full price but please contact me before returning the book.
About this book
Seven Years in Tibet is an autobiography written by Austrian mountaineer Heinrich Harrer based on his real life experiences in Tibet between 1944 and 1951. The story takes place during the Second World War and the interim period before the Communist Chinese People's Liberation Army moved into Tibet in 1950. It narrates the true story of an Austrian prisoner of war who successfully escaped his British captors in India in 1944 on the third attempt. His escape route led him across Tibet. In 1943, Heinrich Harrer, escaped captivity and made his way through the Himalayan passes to the Forbidden City of Lhasa in Tibet and finally lived for years in Lhasa becoming a tutor to the Dalai Lama. Seven Years in Tibet was first published in Germany before being acquired by Dutton.
First Edition Identification
Dutton New York published a 1st edition, 1st print in 1954 as a hardcover. Publisher's salmon-colored cloth with black Tibetan image on front cover and lettered in black on the spine. Illustrated with 40 pages of photographs. The original dust jacket features a picture of Tibetan monks and a $5.00. The Book of the Month Club edition published shortly after the first edition does not have the $5.00 price stamp.