| The Burgess Book of Lies |
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By: Adrian and Alan Burgess
Published by: Mountaineers Books
Paperback, 464 pages
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Publication date: February 1999
Price: $19.96 ISBN: 0898866413
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If you have been climbing for a while you have no doubt heard of the
Burgess twins. They have quite a reputation. Extremely talented and hardworking
alpinists, Alan and Adrian Burgess have been at the limits of alpine climbing
since the late 60's. If you have been fortunate enough to attend one of
their slide shows, then you know that their climbing resume is a virtual
tick list for the world of aplinism. You also know their knack for being
able to tell and embellish the stories of their climbing, and you probably
left the room with a stomach aching from laughter. All of this is chronicled
in their book "The Burgess Book of Lies."
"The Burgess Book of Lies" is about drinking, brawling, womanizing, and
... oh yeah some climbing mixed in too. The book begins with the twins'
introduction to climbing on the Grit Stone of Northern England in the
60's. With a driven force that few of us exhibit, they climbed quickly
through the grades. They unknowingly trained themselves for alpine extremes
with sketchy run-out climbing on wet stone that is typical of English
climbing.
In Chamonix the twins put their training to the test. Traveling to the
heart of alpine climbing every summer, they soon found themselves seconding
many of the hardest climbs in the Alps. This is also where they got their
reputation for their quick fists, trouble making, and being masters of
scrounging. Tales of barroom brawls, stolen cars, and stolen food permeate
this section of the book.
Working just enough to support their climbing habit, Alan and Adrian
Burgess continued to travel the world climbing and drinking. Expeditions
to climb the hard routes on Annapurna, Dhaulagiri, Everest, K2, McKinley,
Fitzroy, Lhotse, and Manaslu appear in the book, not once but several
times. Details of winter attempts on the highest Himalayan peaks are mixed
with the mixed with the descriptions of climbers and Sherpa the twins
shared these experiences with.
Throughout their climbing experiences, the twins are able to live exotic
parts of the world and meet wonderful people. The book is full of reflections
of the love of being able to travel the world doing what they enjoy and
relationships they have been able to develop with the people they have
climbed with.
Death permeates the alpine climbing world and the Burgess twins recount
their near misses. Friends, with whom the twins have shared the most trying
circumstances, are memorialized in the pages of the book. Alan Burgess
reflects on the experience of comforting a dying Sherpa friend who fell
on a climb of Cheo Himal, and the triumph of being able to help save a
fallen German climber on Ganchempmo Peak, both 20,000+ foot peaks.
The Burgess Twins have been at the forefront of alpine climbing for 30
years. The fact they have lived this long is a tribute to their legendary
strength and climbing ability. "The Book of Lies" is full of the stories
that the twins have been able to live. Initially the book was difficult
to follow because the twins are English and the humor is a bit dry. But
once you are immersed into the book, you will find it hard to put down.
Reviewed by John Walter
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