The basis for the new documentary film, Mountain: A Breathtaking
Voyage into the Extreme. Combining accounts of legendary mountain
ascents with vivid descriptions of his own forays into wild, high
landscapes, Robert McFarlane reveals how the mystery of the world's
highest places has came to grip the Western imagination--and perennially
draws legions of adventurers up the most perilous slopes.
His story begins three centuries ago, when mountains were feared as the
forbidding abodes of dragons and other mysterious beasts. In the
mid-1700s the attentions of both science and poetry sparked a passion
for mountains; Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Lord Byron extolled the sublime
experiences to be had on high; and by 1924 the death on Mt Everest of an
Englishman named George Mallory came to symbolize the heroic ideals of
his day. Macfarlane also reflects on fear, risk, and the shattering
beauty of ice and snow, the competition and contemplation of the climb,
and the strange alternate reality of high altitude, magically enveloping
us in the allure of mountains at every level.