Wonderful YA book! Henry’s life is pretty golden until his older brother Franklin is hit by a truck, causing him to lose an arm and to be in a coma. The driver is a Cambodian teenager, and despite the law finding him to not have been negligent, the incident leads to racial unrest in the town where Henry and Franklin’s family has lived for generations.
Their friends and neighbors are more outraged with Chay Chouan’s plea bargain than Henry’s family is. The Chouan’s home, business, and vehicle are vandalized, and Franklin sits in his coma, with “indeterminate brain activity”. The pressure builds up until the only thing Henry can think to do is climb the mountain, Katahdin. He was supposed to climb it with Franklin, who was an experienced climber. Now Henry will climb it himself, with the dog he rescued from drowning, as a tribute to his brother.
Gary Schmidt does an incredible job with character development, and he is one of those writers that can take a small phrase and so clearly set the scene and make you visualize what’s happening. He especially does a great job with the scenes with the dog—it is obvious that the author knows and likes dogs, and those scenes were both heartbreaking, and hysterical! In addition to Henry, the characters of Henry’s friend Sanborn (who shows up to climb Katahdin and support his friend--despite Henry’s attempt to go it alone) and of “the enemy” Chay are superbly done. Sanborn and Henry have one of those deep male friendships disguised by constant insults and even fights—the kind of fights where neither gets mad no matter who wins. And Chay has layers that are revealed a small bit at a time. He goes from The Bad Guy of the story to just…human.
I enjoyed every second of this read, and I will absolutely read everything else Gary Schmidt has written!!