King Solomon's Mines was written by Sir H. Rider Haggard as a result of a five-shilling wager with his brother, who said that he could not write a novel half as good as Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island. Published in 1885 it is regarded as the progenitor of the Lost World literary genre. The dramatic story relates the exciting search for King Solomon's legendary diamond mines by a group of adventurers led by Allan Quartermain. Set in an unexplored region of Africa they are guided by an ancient map, inscribed in blood. On their tense expedition they encounter inhospitable terrain and survive a tribal war before finding the mines and escaping with some of the diamonds. The book's publication was dramatically heralded with billboards and posters around London announcing "The Most Amazing Book Ever Written". became an immediate best seller and is now considered to be one of the best adventure novels in the English language. Everyone loves a good adventure story and a daring protagonist facing and conquering increasingly dangerous challenges in the pursuit of a worthy aim. This is particularly true, in our increasingly sanitised lives where you don't have to leave your armchair to experience the terrifying and death defying; sadly it's all there on a screen at the push of a button.
King Solomon's Mines - Hardback
Giles Foden, Professor of Creative Writing at University of East Anglia, and author of 'The Last King of Scotland' writes; 'Adventure is not simply about danger; its essential characteristic (which King Solomon's Mines deals up in spades) is the unexpected. The word actually comes from the sea-going trade "ventures" that 16th-century insurers would underwrite. What's going to happen, will our ship make it? That was what worried those early brokers, and it's the same feeling that can quicken the heart now.
Adventure is not about broken bones - it's about overcoming an unforeseen course of events within the context of a particular experience. Office-bound, well-fed, TV and internet-fixated, we are too comfortable these days. In a sterilised world we need an outlet for a contingency with all its attendant thrills. King Solomon's Mines provides that outlet.'