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By Mark Inglis

No Mean Feat

Mark Inglis was only 23 when he became a double amputee. No Mean Feat describes how he and fellow climber Phil Doole were trapped in an ice cave near the summit of New Zealand's Mt Cook for 13 days with minimal equipment and little food. By the time they were air-lifted out both men had severe frostbite and had to spend months in hospital recovering.

By Mark Inglis

No Mean Feat

Mark Inglis was only 23 when he became a double amputee. No Mean Feat describes how he and fellow climber Phil Doole were trapped in an ice cave near the summit of New Zealand's Mt Cook for 13 days with minimal equipment and little food. By the time they were air-lifted out both men had severe frostbite and had to spend months in hospital recovering.

By Mark Inglis

To the Max

Teen readers' abridged version of the bestseller 'No Mean Feat'. Mark Inglis is a man who lives life to the max. When he was 23 he was trapped in an ice cave near the summit of Mt Cook with fellow climber Phil Doole for 13 days. They survived through raging blizzards, with very little food until they were found, and by the time they were able to be lifted from the mountain both men had severe frostbite, and had their legs amputated below the knee.

By Mark Inglis

Legs on Everest

On 15 May 2006 double amputee Mark Inglis fulfilled a childhood ambition: to stand on the summit of the highest mountain in the world. Legs on Everest follows his preparation for the Everest attempt and shows that getting there is only half the journey - you have to get back down again alive!

By Mark Inglis

Legs on Everest

On 15 May 2006 double amputee Mark Inglis fulfilled a childhood ambition: to stand on the summit of the highest mountain in the world. Legs on Everest follows his preparation for the Everest attempt and shows that getting there is only half the journey - you have to get back down again alive!

By Mark Inglis & Sarah Ell

High-Tech Legs on Everest

On 15 May 2006, double amputee Mark Inglis fulfilled a childhood ambition - to stand on the top of the highest mountain in the world. High-Tech Legs on Everest tells the story of how he got there, and then the equally gripping tale of how he got back down again. There are plenty of illustrations and boxed material to enliven the pages of a story that is already colourful.

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