Genre: Historical
Publisher: St. Martin’s Press
Publication Date: March 3, 2009
Reviewed by Jeremy Taylor
In 1924, British climber George Mallory—famous for answering a journalist’s question about why he wanted to climb Mount Everest with the words, “Because it’s there”—disappeared after having been last seen just below the summit of the world’s tallest mountain. Whether he actually made it to Everest’s summit before perishing has remained a topic for debate ever since. With his trademark storytelling flair, Jeffrey Archer has taken a stab at the answer.
Though based on the life of a real person, the book is a novel, not a biography. One of Archer’s gifts is the ability to blend fact, fiction, and legend so that even a careful reader might have trouble differentiating between them. With the same attention to detail and expert characterization that brought to life the world of high finance in Kane & Abel and the cutthroat competition of the news business in The Fourth Estate, Archer has given readers a potential answer to the question of whether Mallory reached Everest’s summit.
But the book is far more than simple speculation on the outcome of Mallory’s final expedition. Archer explores Mallory’s life in detail, including his service in the military and his romance with Ruth Turner, who later became his wife. Through it all, Archer brings Mallory’s exploits to life in a way that allows readers to get to know not only the man but also the world in which lived.
The book contains no significant objectionable content; if Archer’s presentation of his subject’s moral character can be believed, Mallory was a man of honor and integrity, and the story happily lacks any of the less savory material found in some of Archer’s other books.
Jeffrey Archer has been called one of the top storytellers in the world, and while it seems doubtful that anyone would label Paths of Glory his best book, it will do nothing to detract from that reputation. Climbing enthusiasts and non-climbers alike will enjoy this account of one of the sport’s early pioneers by one of the world’s great novelists.




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