In this day and age of burgeoning horror stories on Everest caused by overcrowding and climate change, it is a pleasure to read of an Everest summiting story from another era. Major H.P.S. Ahluwalias Higher Than Everest is a new edition of his 1973 autobiography, so this isnt a new book. However, the author has expanded his story to talk about the past four decades of his eventful life. A native of Sialkot in Punjab, the young HPS was a career army man when he caught the mountaineering bug and enrolled at the mountaineering institute in Darjeeling under the tutelage of Tenzing Norgay. A member of a gifted generation of Indian climbers, he would go on to climb extensively in Sikkim and Nepal, culminating in the successful Indian attempt on Everest in 1965. As one of the fabled nine Indians to stand atop Everest that year, Ahluwalias fame was assured. However, soon after this triumph, Ahluwalia was injured during the 1965 Indo-Pakistan War and suffered a grievous spinal injury. The fact that he thrived despite this physical disability and opened Indias first institute for spinal injuries takes his achievements to a whole different level.