📦 A rivalry rekindled. A series reborn. A team climbing its hardest psychological terrain.
💥 A narrative of endurance where the mountain is metaphor and memory.
📍 1997 British & Irish Lions tour — living rooms, locker rooms, and high altitude pressure.
🗝 Adversity, unity, redemption. English and Burns capture the fragility of belief when the odds lean the other way. This is sporting history told as ascent — setbacks, recalibrations, and the rare feeling of a group becoming more than its individuals.
What if the hardest climb was not physical but the ascent of belief itself?
English and Burns reconstruct the Lions’ 1997 tour with forensic detail and narrative flair. The book’s cadence is that of a climb: pressure mounting, setbacks endured, unity forged in fear. It is sporting history reframed as myth, where every tackle is a foothold, every anthem a breath at altitude. The mountain is metaphor, but the endurance is real — a study of character under unforgiving expectation.
If you like sports histories that treat matches as myths, this delivers the same moral resonance as dramas where collective triumph is the plot.
💭 “Some battles are won by refusing to descend.”
💭 “A team becomes a team when fear is carried, not hidden.”
📚 Why @KlacksReads recommends: Because it delivers narrative tension without melodrama — a hymn to resilience, and a reminder that belief itself is the hardest summit.
@KlacksReads · London · 14 November 2025