There is something deeply primitive in mankind that fires the urge to explore,
to search for the unknown whether it is beyond an horizon, over an ocean or,
maybe, up a mountain. This desire, which includes rock faces, was possibly
driven out of the necessity to search for food or minerals but, as modern
society changed, so did the motive and-rock climbing came into being as a
recreation using just body-strength and willpower.
This shift to a sport-like activity emerged towards the end of the 19th
Century when those who would have been considered ‘crazy people’ risked life
and limb on the seemingly worthless and futile pursuit of what we know as
free-climbing be it on small boulders, outcrops and even great vertical
mountain faces.
This book reflects on those women and men, famous or forgotten, whose lives
have been possessed by their passion for the rock.
304 pages, size 24 cm x 28 cm,
more than 350 pictures.