Mountain
climbing, crime drama, and historical fiction certainly might not appear to be
a natural mash-up, but Harry Farthing pulls it off – and quite well at that – with
THE SUMMIT.
Farthing
goes to great lengths in setting up and describing the climbs to and from Mt
Everest in Krakauer-ian detail, with a similar height of excitement. The
treachery, the splendor, the whole man-versus-nature element, all well done. To
compliment, Farthing adds in a historical mystery involving a Nazi attempt at
beating the British to summit Everest first. The ramifications of that plot propel
the lead story of a British climber, Neil Quinn, who accidentally is roped into
a mission to discover if this indeed happened all the while protecting himself
and this mission from the obligatory ne’er-do-wells and adding to the already
high-level of danger as man must also go against man.
Aside from
the plot and pacing, Farthing creates an excellent set of characters. Even
secondary and tertiary players whose sole purpose is to propel the plot along
are fleshed out and real-sounding.
Perhaps the only detraction in this regard is the occasional placing of
dialogue where said characters’ speech can come across as expository rather
than meaningfully implied.
Truly, THE
SUMMIT is a fantastic read. Thanks to NetGalley and Blackstone Publishing for
the advanced copy and a most satisfying novel.
As Always,
theJOE
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