The epic and elemental account of a seismic event - Mount Everest Avalanche, 25 April 2015 - that encompasses the portrait of a nation, the dynamics of disaster, and its impact on the people it envelops.
The epic and elemental account of a seismic event - Mount Everest Avalanche, 25 April 2015 - that encompasses the portrait of a nation, the dynamics of disaster, and its impact on the people it envelops.
At 11.56 on 25 April 2015, an earthquake triggered an avalanche that took out Everest Base Camp; twenty-two people perished on the worst day in the mountain's history. In Nepal, 9,000 people died and 22,000 were critically injured. Three million required humanitarian assistance. Nepal's infrastructure and economy collapsed.
Where the Earth Meets the Sky is the epic, elemental account of a seismic event - the days leading up to it, the moment it hits and its impact on those it envelops. An unsparing but inspiring chronicle, it shows what it takes to survive a hostile environment, to adapt and overcome. It transports us to the roof of the world, a place where more than sixty bodies lie where they fell; where the mountaineering ghosts of Irvine and Mallory still walk, and the legend of Sir Edmund Hillary lives on.James Kerr is an award-winning creative director and brand consultant, and advises leading companies on brand, identity, advertising, internal communications and transformational culture change.
He is also the bestselling author of The Alphabet of the Human Heart and Legacy, and a former captain of the Waihi School 'Under Six Stone' rugby team.At 11.56 on 25 April 2015, an earthquake triggered an avalanche that took out Everest Base Camp; twenty-two people perished on the worst day in the mountain's history. In Nepal, 9,000 people died and 22,000 were critically injured. Three million required humanitarian assistance. Nepal's infrastructure and economy collapsed. Where the Earth Meets the Sky is the epic, elemental account of a seismic event - the days leading up to it, the moment it hits and its impact on those it envelops. An unsparing but inspiring chronicle, it shows what it takes to survive a hostile environment, to adapt and overcome. It transports us to the roof of the world, a place where more than sixty bodies lie where they fell; where the mountaineering ghosts of Irvine and Mallory still walk, and the legend of Sir Edmund Hillary lives on.
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