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Nepal

 

Recommended Reading


  • The market is saturated with books on Nepal. Good general books include Peter Matthiessen's The Snow Leopard, a beautifully written account of the author's pilgrimage to Dolpa to track the elusive cat; and Peter Somerville-Large's engagingly dotty To the Navel of the World, which chronicles his adventures through Nepal's uncharted lands. Try also Pico Iyer's Video Night in Kathmandu, a collection of essays which has a chapter on the collision between Nepalese tradition and Western culture.
  • Recent histories are limited but Fatalism & Development - Nepal's Struggle for Modernisation by Nepalese anthropologist Dor Bahadur Bista is a good place to start. There are more up-to-date books on the country's natural history, including K K Guring's The Heart of the Jungle, George Schaller's Stones of Silence - Journeys in the Himalaya and Robert Fleming Sr et al's Birds of Nepal.
  • Good introductions to Nepalese art can be found in Lydia Aran's The Art of Nepal and Hallvard Kare Kuloy's Tibetan Rugs, while facets of the country's culture are revealed in the classic People of Nepal by Dor Bahadur Bista and Festivals of Nepal by Mary Andersen.
  • Mountaineering breeds either writers or braggarts, judging by the number of publications written after every first ascent of a Himalayan peak. Often choosing which account to read can become one's own personal Everest, but H W Tilman's Nepal Himalaya, Chris Bonington's Annapurna South Face and Mark Anderson's On the Big Hill should steady the nerves. Otherwise, try The Ascent of Rum Doodle by W E Bowman - a classic mountaineering tall story.
  • Kingdoms beyond the Clouds, by Jonathan Gregson is a delightful and thought-provoking read about the Himalayn kingdoms.


   
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