Winner
of much sought after awards,
the Grand Prix at the Banff
Mountain Festival, and the
Boardman
Tasker.
"Hubank's
new book, Hazard's Way, is quite
simply a masterpiece, ... the
finest piece of fictional writing
around the subject of mountaineering
ever to have been published
in this country ... " (Jim
Perrin's review in the September
01 issue of 'Climber'.)
A
fascinating novel written by
Roger Hubank,
author of the highly acclaimed
‘North Wall’.
As
members of the Fell and Rock
gather to commemorate the fallen,
George Hazard is carried back
to Wasdale Head in the years
before the First World War.
Though greatly changed from
what he was, he sees himself
as a youth struggling to escape
the stifling conformity of family
life. On Scafell, Pillar, Gable,
in company with the foremost
climbers of the day, young Hazard
discovers his kinship with a
wider world.
Meanwhile,
his new friends begin to figure
in that inner sanctum of the
soul wherein a youth's idea
of himself is formed, not as
he is, but as he dreams of being.
Friends, though, are not always
what they seem. And looming
ever larger, as the story approaches
its climax, is the Pinnacle
Face of Scafell. In company
with a sinister schoolmaster,
a disillusioned hero of the
South African war, a Cambridge
physicist desperate for success,
the young man is drawn into
a crisis familiar to all climbers.
In
this evocation of the Golden
Age of Lakeland climbing Roger
Hubank's new novel probes the
compelling mythologies of mountaineering
to uncover those illusions of
heart and mind from which spring
the tragedies of human nature. |