Dorothy Pilley (1894-1986) was a trailblazing writer and mountaineer who led the way for women's climbing and co-founded the Pinnacle Club for women in 1921. She climbed ridges and sheer faces around the world, creating a legacy that is admired to this day. In 1928, together with her husband I.A. Richards and Swiss Guides Joseph and Antoine Georges, she pioneered a route up the north- north-west ridge of the Dent Blanche in Switzerland. Climbing Days, a celebrated memoir of her early life and climbs, was published in 1935.
'A true classic. An invitation to be bold, have fun and find the best words for adventure' - HELEN MORT 'Fizzes with energy, crackles with chutzpah - a groundbreaking account of a pioneering life' - ROBERT MACFARLANE 'A superb chronicle of vertiginous exploits and derring do . . . a luminous, questing mountain odyssey' - DAN RICHARDS 'Some climbing books grant you insights into geography, or topology, or human psychology. Some climbing books simply scare you to death. Just now and then, there's one that conveys the sheer fun of it all' - RONALD TURNBULL 'Throughout history, there have been British women at the forefront of climbing, on both a national and global scale. Dorothy Pilley is one such lady' - Natalie Berry '' -