John Geddie was a Scottish journalist and author of several books mainly on the subject of Edinburgh. His earliest books were about foreign parts but it is not known whether he actually visited these places.
A rare collection of travels in the north eastern India,across the high passes in eastern Himalayas into "Thibet" (Tibet as per the name used in the book throughout), past Tibet through to Burma and South Eastern Tibet in the valleys and divides of great Asiatic rivers as Irrawaddy, Salween and Mekong. Through a number of difficulties and a long ,long perilous journey they discover the secrets of lost cities Shans and the secret temples high in the mountains of south eastern Tibet and ends after crossing the Salween again along the Irrawaddy in the Capital City of Rangoon in British Burma.
This is a rare book first published in 1882. Of course we can not relate the document and narratives under today's light. The book is crisply written in smooth but varying paces matching their travel and the rivers, hills and valleys they countered. This is a digitized book made by Google to make the work available to readers across the globe. The edition, may be the original one is having a good many printing mistakes and some pages that can not be completely decipherable. This is the only drawback of this. That's why I hold one star less.
Peoples of Himalayas through the eyes of young English explorers and their chief doctor Roland. Some of their adventures are, perhaps, hard to believe but that does not spoil the book. Its adventurous, its engaging and most interestingly it walks us through the important details of the past of colonialism.