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Farthing, Harry

WORK TITLE: Summit
WORK NOTES:
PSEUDONYM(S):
BIRTHDATE: 1964
WEBSITE: http://www.harryfarthing.com/
CITY: Charleston
STATE: SC
COUNTRY:
NATIONALITY: British

RESEARCHER NOTES:

LC control no.: no2016078224
LCCN Permalink: https://lccn.loc.gov/no2016078224
HEADING: Farthing, Harry
000 00791nz a2200181n 450
001 10181957
005 20160611075009.0
008 160610n| azannaabn |n aaa c
010 __ |a no2016078224
035 __ |a (OCoLC)oca10496615
040 __ |a IlMpPL |b eng |e rda |c IlMpPL
046 __ |f 1964 |2 edtf
100 1_ |a Farthing, Harry
370 __ |a Lynton (England) |2 naf
374 __ |a Mountaineers |a Novelists |2 lcsh
377 __ |a eng
670 __ |a Farthing, Harry. Summit, 2016: |b title page (Harry Farthing) jacket flap (Harry Farthing; The years took him across the world and up and down many peaks; Summit, debut novel)
670 __ |a Author’s website, June 10, 2016: |b about page (Harry Farthing is an Englishman born in 1964 in Lynton, North Devon, and raised in the West Country) |u http://www.harryfarthing.com/about.html

PERSONAL

Born 1964, in Lynton, England; married Farrah; children: Isla, Eden.

EDUCATION:

Attended the University of the West of England (Bristol).

ADDRESS

  • Home - Charleston, SC.

CAREER

Writer. Previously, worked as a real estate consultant in London, England, and Lisbon, Portugal, and managing director of operations and European board director in Milan, Italy.

AVOCATIONS:

Mountaineering, traveling, adventure sports.

MEMBER:

Royal Geographical Society (fellow).

AWARDS:

“Hottest Dad over Forty” Award, NBC Universal.

WRITINGS

  • Summit, (Hawkridge, SC), 2014

SIDELIGHTS

Harry Farthing is a writer based in Charleston, South Carolina. Born in Lynton, England, he attended the University of the West of England, which is located in Bristol. In 1987, he began his career in real estate. Farthing joined a global real estate consulting firm. He worked as a consultant for the company in London and Lisbon, Portugal. The company sent Farthing to Milan, Italy, where he was promoted to managing director of Italian operations and director of the European board. He retired from his position with the firm in 2010. 

Farthing has long pursued adventure sports, mountaineering, and exploring. He undertook a motorcycle journey from the United Kingdom to the Sahara desert in Morocco when he was just nineteen years old. Farthing has gone on to climb mountains around the world, including Tibet’s Shishapangma, the Alps’ Matterhorn and Mt. Blanc, Africa’s Kilimanjaro, and Alaska’s Mt. McKinley. He also climbed Mount Everest but did not reach its summit. Farthing made another lengthy motorcycle journey in 2011, traversing North America for a total of 7,500 miles, 2,000 of which were on unpaved roads.

In 2014, Farthing released his first novel, Summit. In an interview with Cullen Murray-Kemp, contributor to the Mount Pleasant Web site, he discussed the volume’s plot, stating: “It’s a novel written with firsthand knowledge of what it is actually like to climb above 26,000 feet without the benefit of an oxygen mask–to feel the joy and pain of an ascent of Mount Everest.” Farthing also mentioned his own experience on Everest, remarking: “That’s just the irony of the book’s title–Summit–that I actually never summited Mount Everest. There was a point when I was about 400 meters from the summit and bad weather was rolling in. I thought of my family and made the safe decision to return to camp.”  

In Summit, Nelson Tate pushes his son, Nelson Jr., to climb the Seven Summits. If he succeeds, Nelson Jr., who is sixteen years old, will be the youngest person to summit all seven of the peaks. Nelson Jr. successfully climbs six of the seven mountains, leaving Everest for last. Nelson Jr. passes out due to lack of oxygen near the top of the mountain, but the expedition company’s owner, Jean-Phillipe Sarron, instructs his employees to haul Nelson Jr.’s body to the summit and photograph him there, so that his mission will be complete. A guide named Neil Quinn carries Nelson Jr. down the mountain, but Nelson Jr. dies. Interspersed throughout the narrative are sections depicting the Nazis’ attempt to climb Everest.

A reviewer in Publishers Weekly offered a mixed assessment of Summit. The reviewer described the book as “uneven” and suggested: “Farthing vividly depicts the challenges of mountain-climbing but employs less than memorable characters.”

BIOCRIT

PERIODICALS

  • Publishers Weekly, April 25, 2016, review of Summit, p. 70.

ONLINE

  • Harry Farthing Home Page, http://www.harryfarthing.com/ (February 14, 2017).

  • Mount Pleasant Online, http://mountpleasantmagazine.com/ (2014), Cullen Murray-Kemp, author interview.

Not listed in the LOC.
  • Summit - 2014 , Hawkridge, SC
  • Harry Farthing - http://www.harryfarthing.com/about.html

    Harry Farthing is an Englishman born in 1964 in Lynton, North Devon, and raised in the West Country. He was educated at St. Michael’s Preparatory School, near Barnstaple, Allhallows Public School, near Lyme Regis, and at the University of the West of England in Bristol. From 1987 he enjoyed a successful career with one of the world's largest commercial real estate consultancies. During this period, he lived and worked in the City of London, Lisbon, Portugal and Milan, Italy, becoming Managing Director of the company's Italian operations and European Board Director with responsibility for activities in Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Bahrain and Qatar. In 2010 he took early retirement to move with his American wife to Charleston, South Carolina, and pursue a career in writing.

    ​Harry Farthing has had a lifelong interest in exploration, archaeology and world history, both published and alternate. He is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and has travelled widely to extreme environments such as the Sahara Desert, the Himalaya, the Amazon and the Arctic North. An experienced mountaineer, he has climbed extensively, including Mt Blanc and the Matterhorn in the Alps, Mt McKinley in Alaska, Shishapangma, the highest mountain in Tibet, and Mount Everest itself. In 2010 he successfully led all thirteen members of a charity climb to the summit of Kilimanjaro in Africa. In 2011 he made a solo 7,500 mile journey across North America by BMW Motorcycle that linked the Atlantic, Arctic and Pacific Oceans and travelled 2,000 miles of unpaved roads above the 60th Parallel. That trip was the latest in a series of extreme motorcycle journeys that started with a ride from the UK to the Moroccan Sahara when he was just nineteen.

    His debut novel, Summit, marries his knowledge of world travel, adventure sports, mountaineering and modern history to create an exciting action story that is both compelling and thought provoking. A sequel about Africa and the continent's highest mountain, Kilimanjaro, is already in the pipeline.

  • Mount Pleasant - http://mountpleasantmagazine.com/2014/people/from-mount-pleasant-to-mount-everest-a-profile-of-the-most-interesting-man-east-of-the-cooper/

    QUOTED: “It’s a novel written with firsthand knowledge of what it is actually like to climb above 26,000 feet without the benefit of an oxygen mask–to feel the joy and pain of an ascent of Mount Everest.”
    "That’s just the irony of the book’s title–Summit–that I actually never summited Mount Everest. There was a point when I was about 400 meters from the summit and bad weather was rolling in. I thought of my family and made the safe decision to return to camp.”

    From Mount Pleasant to Mount Everest: A Profile of the Most Interesting Man East of the Cooper

    Posted by MPM Leave a Comment

    During my time with Mount Pleasant Magazine, I’ve interviewed and crossed paths with many interesting East of the Cooper
    residents. I have been dragged down the Isle of Palms beach by a 20-foot kite while learning how to kite board. I drank beers with some of the coolest oldtimers I’ve ever met at the Carolina Coast Surf Club. I even rode shotgun in a souped-up golf cart as the wingman of the “mayor of I’On.”

    Yet, as I look back at all the remarkable people and their extraordinary stories, one Englishman stands out. Meet 49-year-old mountaineer, writer and Mount Pleasant’s most interesting man: Harry Farthing.

    Harry Farthing
    Farthing with his wife, Farrah, and daughters, Isla and Eden.
    Farthing, who hails from the United Kingdom, is an explorer whose voyages have literally taken him to the furthest corners of the world. A born traveler, Farthing’s lust for exploration began at a young age. At just 19, he embarked on an extreme motorcycle adventure – the first of many – from the U.K. to the Moroccan Sahara.

    Whether it’s climbing Mount Everest, riding from country to country on his BMW motorcycle or winning the title of NBC Universal’s “Hottest Dad over 40,” I can’t think of a better person to be stuck in an airport terminal with than Harry Farthing.

    I recently sat down with the former commercial real estate executive turned writer to talk shop. Farthing pulled up to our meeting at Mozzo Deli on Coleman Boulevard on his signature red and black BMW motorcycle.

    Our conversation drifted to Farthing’s passion for motorcycle journeys, such as his 4,000-mile trip from England to Morocco.

    “I had never traveled by myself before, and seeing all the different cultures in Spain, Portugal and eventually Morocco was a wonder. It really set the tone for my later trips,” Farthing remembered.

    Farthing’s passion for mountaineering can be traced back to his childhood days, when he would study books by Chris Bonington, a member of the original British Himalayan expedition. In 1999, Farthing moved to Lake Como in Italy, near the Swiss Alps, which is where Farthing began to fall in love with mountain climbing.

    Since the late 1990s, Farthing has become a successful and experienced climber and has challenged and defeated peaks such as Mont Blanc and The Matterhorn in the Alps, Mount McKinley in Alaska, Shishapangma in Tibet, and Mount Kilimanjaro in Africa.

    I asked Farthing to describe “Summit,” his forthcoming novel. I could feel his passion from across the table as he explained that the fictional story about an adventurous Mount Everest climb existed whether he had climbed Everest or not. Yet the essence and success of the novel hinged on his experiences as a mountaineer and his time spent in the Himalayas.

    Farthing’s objective with the novel was to remove his readers from their front porch lounge chairs and relocate them to a treacherous, icy cliff in Tibet.

    “It’s a novel written with firsthand knowledge of what it is actually like to climb above 26,000 feet without the benefit of an oxygen mask – to feel the joy and pain of an ascent of Mount Everest,” Farthing explained.

    “Pretend you’re a book reviewer and you have 15 words or fewer to describe your novel,” I prodded.

    “‘Into Thin Air’ meets ‘The Da Vinci Code’ with a touch of ‘Indiana Jones,’” said Farthing confidently

    I was beginning to feel like I was 10 years old, and I was interviewing my childhood hero.

    “What’s the craziest thing that’s ever happened to you on a climb?” I asked.

    “Probably the first time I entered the death zone without oxygen,” said Farthing.

    “Whoa, the death zone?” I blurted out, interrupting Farthing.

    “Yes. The death zone is over 8,000 meters, where no human body can acclimatize. It’s like flying on the wing of a commercial airplane,” Farthing continued.

    “So what was that like?” I questioned.

    “I was on a four-week journey to the summit of Shishapangma in Tibet (8,013 meters). At 8,000+ meters without oxygen, it felt like I was walking through gel. The whole experience was very dream-like,” Farthing related.

    Harry Farthing on Everest
    Harry Farthing – mountaineer, writer and explorer – might just be the most interesting man East of the Cooper.
    As our conversation fluttered from peak to peak, we landed on the topic of the day: Mount Everest. I asked Farthing just what it was like to reach the highest point of the highest mountain in the world.

    “It must have been quite the pinnacle, so to speak, for a mountaineer such as yourself,” I punned.

    Farthing paused, as if maybe my question took him back to a point on the mother of all mountains.

    “Well that’s just the irony of the book’s title – “Summit”–that I actually never summited Mount Everest. There was a point when I was about 400 meters from the summit and bad weather was rolling in. I thought of my family and made the safe decision to return to camp,” Farthing lamented.

    “Not summiting Mount Everest hurt me for a few years after the climb. Yet that mountain will stay with me forever and won’t fade away like other mountains I’ve summited,” Farthing said.

    He seemed at peace with the mountain – almost as if it had taught him a life lesson.

    “Will you ever go back?” I had to ask.

    “I’d be lying if I said I haven’t thought about it. I can never say never,” Farthing said.

    Find out more about Harry Farthing and his novel, “Summit,” at www.harryfarthing.com.

    Photos provided by Harry Farthing

    Story by Cullen Murray-Kemp

QUOTED: "Farthing vividly depicts the challenges of mountain-climbing but employs less than memorable characters."

Summit
Publishers Weekly.
263.17 (Apr. 25, 2016): p70.
COPYRIGHT 2016 PWxyz, LLC
http://www.publishersweekly.com/
Full Text: 
Summit
Harry Farthing. Blackstone, $29.99 (480p) ISBN 978-1-5047-1021-3
Mount Everest provides the backdrop for mountaineer Farthing's uneven first novel. In the gripping opening, Nelson Tate is determined that his
16-year-old namesake son will become the youngest person ever to climb the Seven Summits, culminating with Everest itself. The stunt proves
tragically misguided when Nelson Jr. collapses near the top of Everest. Despite the boy's fragile condition, the cartoonishly evil owner of New
Horizons Expeditions, Jean-Phillipe Sarron, insists that Nelson Jr. be boosted to the summit so that his "achievement" can be photographed. Head
guide Neil Quinn desperately tries to get his charge back down to safety, but he fails, compromised in part by a defective oxygen supply. Blamed
by Sarron for the fiasco, Quinn tries to find out the truth about the calamity. Flashbacks to 1930s Germany chart a Nazi scheme to conquer
Everest as a symbol of their racial supremacy. Farthing vividly depicts the challenges of mountain-climbing but employs less than memorable
characters. (June)
Source Citation   (MLA 8th
Edition)
"Summit." Publishers Weekly, 25 Apr. 2016, p. 70. General OneFile, go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?
p=ITOF&sw=w&u=schlager&v=2.1&id=GALE%7CA450904546&it=r&asid=1e1b3e6814a1eef45bde44758dad727d. Accessed 5 Feb.
2017.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A450904546

"Summit." Publishers Weekly, 25 Apr. 2016, p. 70. General OneFile, go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do? p=ITOF&sw=w&u=schlager&v=2.1&id=GALE%7CA450904546&it=r. Accessed 5 Feb. 2017.