The Beckoning Silence
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Average customer review:Product Description
Since his epic battle for survival in the Andes, recounted in the bestselling Touching the Void, Joe Simpson has endured several further brushes with death and has suffered the loss of many climbing friends in accidents which call into question the exhilarating, death-defying activity to which he has devoted his whole life. Never more alive than when most at risk, he has come to see an attempt on the Eiger, with its hooded, mile-high North Face, as the culmination of his climbing career.In a narrative which takes the reader through extreme experiences from an avalanche in South America, ice-climbing in the Alps and Colorado and paragliding in Spain - before his final confrontation with the Eiger and two more deaths - Simpson reveals the inner truth of climbing, exploring both the power of the mind and the frailties of the body. The subject of his new book is the siren song of fear and his struggle to come to terms with it.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #9604 in Books
- Published on: 2003-01-02
- Binding: Paperback
- 328 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
In The Beckoning Silence, climber Joe Simpson, author of the bestselling Touching the Void, recounts how his mountain dreams became shadowed by the deaths of friends and heroes, and hampered by the weight of probability that his own life would end in the same way. The result is a valedictory attempt on the North Face of the Eiger, a summation of his lifelong enchantment with climbing, and the parlaying of rock-solid risk with intangible rewards. It was a final adventure that would itself be touched by tragedy.
Simpson has established himself as the leading mountaineering writer of his time, and The Beckoning Silence is a bold reassertion of that status. Always strong on the personal meaning of the challenge, here he is superb on the bubbling fear that forms such a critical element of the climber's kit; the minutiae of circumstance that seemingly separate the survivors and the dead; and the crisis that envelopes a climbing partnership on the mountainside, at the instant extreme pressure disturbs the balance of shared ambition and ability.
Tat turned and looked speculatively up the corner and I felt even angrier that he might still be risking my life. What can you do if he insists? I mean, you can't pull him off. That would kill us. If he insists, then you'll have to un-rope. Jesus! Tell him that. "Tat?" I said quietly, hearing the fear in my voice.
The narrative takes Simpson to Bolivia, the Alps, Colorado and to the foot of the Eiger, where he receives a uniquely rich and moving tutorial on the history of the challenge that lies ahead. Simpson fans need know no more than that this may be his finest effort to date. For the uninitiated, there is simply no more evocative, emotionally literate author writing on this subject today.--Alex Hankin
Synopsis
Joe Simpson has experienced a life filled with adventure but marred by death. He has endured the painful attrition of climbing friends in accidents, calling into question the perilously exhilarating activity to which he has devoted his life. Probability is inexorably closing in. The tragic loss of a close friend forces a momentous decision upon him. It is time to turn his back on the mountains that he has loved. Never more alive than when most at risk, he has come to see a last climb on the hooded, mile-high North Face of the Eiger as the cathartic finale. In a narrative which takes the reader through extreme experiences from an avalanche in Bolivia, ice-climbing in the Alps and Colorado and paragliding in Spain before his final confrontation with the Eiger, Simpson reveals the inner truth of climbing, exploring both the power of the mind and the frailties of the body. The subject of his new book is the siren song of fear and his struggle to come to terms with it.
About the Author
Joe Simpson won the Boardman Tasker Award and the NCR Award for his bestseller Touching the Void, which has been published all over the world. His later books, all bestsellers, include This Game of Ghosts, Dark Shadows Falling, Storms of Silence and a novel, The Water People.
Customer Reviews
Joe at his most thoughtful
I am a huge fan of mountaineering literature and I especially enjoy a pacy tale, however The Beckoning Silence moves at quite a slow pace and appropriately so. In this book Joe Simpson is feeling the effects of advancing years, losing his nerve. So many of his friends have died tragically that he comtemplates abandoning mountaineering altogether. He reflects on his early years considering that he was perhaps obsessed at that time.
A friend encourages him to have one last hurrah - to climb the mountain that inspired him to become an mountaineer in the first place - the Nordwand of the Eiger - aka the Mordwand because of the death toll of climbers who perished attempting to scale the wall.
Joe gives an interesting account of the history of the Eiger and explores his own fears and reason for them in great depth. Certain paragraphs of this book are so beautifully written I am tempted to take it up again. It is an elegy combined with mountaineering adventure.
Mid life crisis?
This is a stunning book from Joe Simpson; I prefer it to Touching the Void. The account of his ascent up the north face is a masterclass in storytelling.
But it's more than a book about climbing a mountain, or the history of climbing that mountain, which is covered well and sensitively. It's about the journey of life; how one changes as the years pass, and friends disappear. Anyone who has been through such life events will identify with Simpson wrestling with his conscience as he ponders why he does what he does. And you get a better answer than 'because it's there'.
When danger becomes too dangerous
Joe Simpson's first book, Touching the Void, is a gripping description of a climb that went (almost tragically) wrong. If you haven't read that first, I would recommend doing so - it provides much of the emotional set-up for The Beckoning Silence. Here Simpson describes many tragic trips of other climbers; treading an uneasy path between sensationalism and his urgent need to share the feelings inspired by being part of such a close-knit yet endangered community. Simpson does an excellent job of taking the layperson inside a world where life is fragile, hanging by the thin thread of a climbing rope on an all-too-precarious perch.
The possibility overshadows the book that Simpson spends so much time dwelling on the tragedies of others so that readers will not criticise him for trips where he has backed down. Fair enough - although there is a sense that he does not want his decisions to be harshly judged, this is unlikely from anyone who has first read Void. Simpson's courage could never now be called into question, and it is interesting to read his judgements on when danger becomes too dangerous. Essentially this is the crux of the book - whether we are reading about Simpson's own decisions or those of others which now haunt him, this is the central decision at every turn: when to face peril and when to retreat from it.




