- Paul Pritchard
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Paul Pritchard"' (born
1967 inBolton ,Lancashire ) was one of the leading British climbers of the 1980s and 1990s. He started climbing at 16 in his native Lancashire, and in 1986 moved toLlanberis inNorth Wales , climbing extensively on the slate of the Llanberis quarries and on the sea cliffs atGogarth . He gained a reputation for climbing hard and very poorly protected routes such as Super Calabrese (E8 6b) at Gogarth, still considered one of the most serious routes in the UK. In 1990, he began mountaineering, and subsequently climbed many difficult mountain routes around the world.On Friday
13th February 1998, his life changed drastically when he was hit by a large boulder as he was climbing theTotem Pole , a slendersea stack off the coast ofTasmania . He was left suffering fromhemiplegia , a condition that robbed him of feeling and movement in his right side and which caused his speech and memory to suffer.He has written three books:
*"Deep Play" (1997) is about his early climbing experiences
*"Totem Pole" (1999) about his accident and his recovery from it:He won theBoardman Tasker Prize for Mountain Literature for both these books (the only person to win the award twice). "Totem Pole" also won the 1999Banff Mountain Book Festival Grand Prize.
*"The Longest Climb" (2005) continues his story of recoveryExternal links
* [http://www.paulpritchard.com.au/index.htm Paul Pritchard's Website]
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