Authors find friends in high places

OUR MOUNTAINS<br>Journey to New Zealand's High Places<br><b>Paul Hersey and Mark Watson</b><br><i>New Holland</i>
OUR MOUNTAINS<br>Journey to New Zealand's High Places<br><b>Paul Hersey and Mark Watson</b><br><i>New Holland</i>
Bright, bold books with an outdoor theme and lots of strong photographs seem to do well these days, no matter the competition from e-books.

The recipe seems to be to combine a connecting theme, an able writer and a dedicated and talented photographer. Mix them together and a book to browse and admire is produced.

This is one of these.

Paul Hersey is a Dunedin-based author, climber and surfer and Mark Watson a climber.

Despite their background, and despite the inclusion of Mitre Peak, Aspiring, Double Cone (the Remarkables), Mt Rolleston (Arthurs Pass) and Aoraki Mt Cook, this is not a book aimed at climbers.

Instead, Hersey and Watson spent a year, from Manaia in Northland to Mt Anglem on Stewart Island, seeking stories about the peaks, with sketches, too, of people involved today. They endeavour to give each mountain a flavour, a personality.

As well as the personal adventure in each climb, interspersed is information and history. The coverage naturally varies in content, is a little uneven and cannot be comprehensive. The goal is to lead us on journeys to and around the various peaks.

Mt Eden in Auckland is a stroll, Hikurangi on the East Coast of the North Island is in part a cultural excursion and Mt Arthur, near Nelson, is mostly underground.

Further chapters are Pirongia Mountain (Waikato's highest landmark), Mt Ruapehu, Mt Taranaki, Mt Hector (the Tararuas) and Tapuae-o-Uenuku (the Kaikouras) - 15 in all.

Mt Sefton (left) and Aoraki Mt Cook (right), with Mueller Hut in the foreground, in an image from...
Mt Sefton (left) and Aoraki Mt Cook (right), with Mueller Hut in the foreground, in an image from Our Mountains. Photo by Mark Watson.
I appreciated the photography notes on how Watson went about his business. Clearly, the process is far from a one-shot wonder: many trips, scanning for the best light, careful thought about angles and the technical knowledge that has become so much a part of advanced photography these days.

As is the way with such books, it is not the type most would read from cover to cover within a week. The stories, while interesting, are not quite gripping enough for that. But Our Mountains is a publication to leave lying around so as to consume decent slices regularly.

The stories, for me, also spur a desire to have a go at a few more of these peaks, although several are extremely ambitious undertakings and most are certainly not for everyone.

From this point of view, the ''climbing notes'' at the back are a helpful guide about what might be possible.

Oh well, four down (or should that be up) and 11 to go.


Win a copy
The ODT has five copies of Our Mountains, by Paul Hersey and Mark Watson (RRP $45), to give away courtesy of publisher New Holland.

For your chance to win a copy, email helen.speirs@odt.co.nz with your name and postal address in the body of the email, and ''Our Mountains Book Competition'' in the subject line, by 5pm on Tuesday, November 5.


 

- Phillip Somerville is ODT editorial manager and a keen alpine tramper.

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