Rating: Not rated
Tags: Non-Fiction
Summary
Three centuries ago, mountains were considered forbidding
and forbidden--the abodes of dragons and other ill-tempered
grotesque beasts. But with the growing recognition that the
Earth's surface had not been created once and for all but was
slowly evolving, mountains came to be seen as the unexplored
text of the Earth's story--a terrain that scientists,
adventurers, naturalists, and, finally, travelers began to
explore. In
Mountains of the Mind, Robert Macfarlane blends cultural
history, meditation, and memoir to show how early geologists
helped transform our perceptions of the wild, chaotic
landscapes; how the allure of height increasingly drew fearless
climbers, culminating in the romantic figure of George Mallory,
the passionate Englishman who died on Mount Everest in 1924;
and how the elemental beauty of snow and ice coalesced into an
aesthetic of the sublime.
Mountains of the Mind is at once an enthralling work of
history, an intimate account of Macfarlane's own...