Book description
Meetings On The Edge is a travel memoir by Mags MacKean, a
once-frustrated journalist for the BBC, who took the plunge and
abandoned a ten-year career to follow her dream to become a
mountaineer. The book explores the impact of a solitary journey as
well as unexpected encounters with some fascinating people along the
way. The different natural environments she encounters mirror the
demands of an evolving quest. The many lessons of nature's classroom
are set against a background of adventure, discovery and undertaken
with considerable personal risk. Like all quests, the incidental
insights and surprising events challenge the romantic idea of
adventure. Stories from Alaska, the Pacific North-West, the Himalaya
and New Zealand's Southern Alps are interwoven into the central
adventure of traversing the French and Spanish Pyrenees alone. Tales
to highlight include encountering a naked and all too aroused flasher
far off the beaten track, a colourful relationship with Nepal's most
famous civilian, a film star, two weeks after the massacre of the
royal family, and summiting Denali, North America's highest peak,
while the expedition dwindled from 9 to just 4 due to life-threatening
illness and mishap. But it was after a chance meeting with a wise
Maori man and a solitary encounter with a 2000-year-old Kauri tree in
an ancient forest, that the author experiences an epiphany: that a
restless, goal-driven life is not the most fulfilling. The book ends
in the foothills of the Pyrenees, where the freedom she has
experienced is in marked contrast to the security-conscious existence
of those living there. The electric gates, fencing and hedgerows
project a community in fear of those very open spaces which had
broadened her horizons. This is travel writing of a high and
insightful order and marks Mags MacKean as a new and exciting
proponent of this genre.