Many people including myself love survival stories, whether they be fantastic or realistic. Death Mountain by Sherry Shahan is included in the list of books I enjoy. This book is not what I expected upon first opening it, especially because of what the back cover read. I expected a more fantastic story based on the word choice used, I was inevitably wrong, but not disappointed in it’s content. Death Mountain kept me hooked with the characters Erin and Mae trapped together in the woods, the sub-plot of Erin’s mom finally contacting her after 11 months, and Mae’s all around character development. It took all these girls had to get them off the mountain safely, and it was not an easy journey.
Erin was walking down the side of the highway, her bus ticket had been stolen, and she had to hitchhike to the nearest gas station. There, she met Mae, an average girl that was going up the nearby Sierra Nevada mountain range to go swimming, and was willing to let Erin tag along. During their hike up the mountain, a freak storm hit that completely scattered the group they were hiking with. Mae ran away in confusion, and Erin ran after her. Once the storm is over, and Erin finds Mae, where they are several hours, and many miles away from the nearest trail, from the nearest sign of human civilization. It would take about six days from that point on, from hiking, all the way to scaling a vertical rock wall. Mae had no idea what she was doing, and Erin had only brief knowledge due to trips with her grandmother. They had water from iodine tablets that Erin had packed, but no other luxuries, only by the skin of their teeth would they survive.
It didn’t help that Erin’s mother had disappeared all of a sudden, and only contacted the family eleven months later. Erin’s mom, who Erin didn’t consider her mom, and only refers to her by her first name “Lannie,” decided to have Erin come to where she was. Erin was to go to her by bus, but as fate would have it, the ticket was stolen. Throughout Erin and Mae’s adventure, thoughts of Lannie filled Erin’s head, sometimes even leading her to completely stop for a few moments before Mae snapped her back to reality. Erin knew that her grandmother would be worried about her, and with less worry in Erin’s mind, so would her mother.
Erin was grateful to have Mae with her though, even if she had no idea what she was doing. Considering the circumstances they were in, Erin at least wanted some company, even if she didn’t like dragging someone else into that mess. Mae was a girl that didn’t have the slightest idea how to survive in nature, but with Erin’s help, and time to adjust, Mae turned out to be stronger than Erin herself. Mae kept Erin from giving up when she was thinking about her mother. Even though she didn’t like her, Erin’s mother was still her mother, so she loved and cared for regardless.
It can be hard to live in the woods for just short of a week, but luckily Erin wasn’t alone. If she was, it would have been much harder to survive. With a friend by your side, things get easier. I enjoyed this book very much, it showed how someone with many things wrong in their life could pull through with people to support them. Whether it be stuck in the woods, dealing with the fact that your mother is finally coming back to you, or just seeing your friend mature in a tough time. I mostly enjoyed seeing the Erin and Mae bond, they had almost a day to get to know each other, and suddenly, they were surviving in the woods together for six days.