✰ 3.75 stars ✰
“My dad always says that where a person looks, their feet will follow.
As long as we keep our eyes on the summit, one day someone is certain to reach it.”
Still coming down from the high of Jennifer Nielsen's Ascendance series urged me to check out her upcoming middle-grade historical fiction release a part coming-of-age, part the daring adventure of rescue & personal growth of fourteen-year-old Atlas Wade atop Mount Everest. 🧗🗻
Exhilarating and adventurous, but also heartwarming and touching. It is the brave and daring journey of how Atlas has to brave his own fears of letting go of a past of regret and sadness in order for him to move on. It is an emotional climb, one which has him test his own endurance and his own willpower of scaling mountains that exist not only in his heart, but what he faces in the form of the highest peak of the world - the Goddess of the Earth - Mt. Everest where 'even a small mistake on Everest can be deadly.' 😨 And while it simply is an expedition of which his father regretfully refuses to include his son alongside him, the tide of the mountain is as unpredictable as it is treacherous - how One Wrong Step can be the deciding factor of life or death. For when his father and his team go missing after sending out a cry for help, it is up to him and Maddie Pierson, a young American girl whose father accompanied him on the trek, to find a way to save them. 😟
For in 1939, with the threat of World World II breaking the airwaves, it is not much to wonder if the slopes of the Himalayas would interest anyone to climb for prestige and honor, when war is on the rise. But, for some there is also the threat of a Nazi presence amidst the icy winds and frozen terrain that strikes a fear in all present. 😥 It is that deciding factor that either hinders or spurs them into quicker desperation to save the lives and even be distrustful of any unsuspecting person, before an unwitting threat strike - 'when everything in life blurs, survival becomes a matter of instinct.' It clings to Atlas and thwarts his sense and battles his nerves of wit and grit. For to Atlas, it is not only a mission to save the only living relative he has, but to also find a way to take a step forward - to unseal the heart that he has frozen off to life and time after his mother's death - to find it within himself to be brave to take a risk to trust himself and move forward without regret and find an inner peace within himself. 😟
“You are looking in the wrong direction.”
His grief and heartache over his mother's death was visceral and in a way, his driving force to succeed. To truly climb the impossible - surpass the limits of his own expectations. because he was avoiding not only letting go of that guilt and sadness, but finding it himself to forgive his father for feelings left unspoken. It is that delicate balance of emotional strength and his own physical skills of scaling the mountains and risking life and limb that makes Atlas a relatable character who fights his way to triumph over the challenges he faces. 'I have to see this through, no matter what.' 😥 He and Maddie also made an interesting duo, but one that built a relationship of trust and well, not really friends - but two souls who had to work to survive and save the ones they loved. Even though she shouldered her own burdens, Maddie was levelheaded and honest; she was the outsider perspective Atlas needed for him to better understand whatever demons were still holding onto him and help him let go of that pain and shame. ❤️🩹❤️🩹
“How beautiful it was, but how cruel, to beckon climbers to its trails over and over again, teasing them with hope, then trading it for disappointment, or even tragedy.”
The writing did a great job in capturing the daunting feel of Everest; there is nothing more majestic than seeing a mountain with its steep slopes that mindfully taunts - You’ve come close enough. Any step farther is at your own risk.' ⛰️ And Nielsen does not shy away in showing how treacherous it is - how any misstep or miscalculation can be everything - how you have to stay quick on your feet - be mindful of your health - be respectful of your team - don't be afraid to ask for help for up here - 'the greatest danger is not a Nazi. It’s you pretending you know what you are doing.' 🥺 Time is off the essence and the hurdles they faced on their trek were captured in a gripping and enthralling manner that also happily fit the age gap it was targeted for. My heart hurt also learning about George Mallory, a tragedy that even now sparks speculation and intrigue - one that once again reminds us how helpless we are at the powers and forces not in our control. 😞
A few notes of complaint that made it less of a stellar read was the transitions of past events interspersed in between that affected the flow of the narrative. I do get the necessity of it, I just wish it could have been approached differently. The Nazi subplot - I think it was a creative and unique approach, a bit hard to believe at times and it did detract from the seriousness of their plight at times; but given the time period, it kinda works. If not for its inclusion, it really would have simply been an adventure story - give or take. 🤔 The ending also lacked a bit of an epilogue, which I think would have tied it a little together - just a bit better.
Of course, one will argue that Atlas and Maddie did treat certain life-threatening moments with a certain levity that definitely would not pass at that moment in real life. But, as Chodak wisely reasoned - 'Sometimes, when things are at their worst, it must be okay to smile. It helps us to survive.' If even the simple courage of making light of the moment of despair gave either of them strength, then who am I to argue. 🫂 But, I did feel it was a bit unfair that Maddie seemed to be made of stronger grit than Atlas - sorta like an American to English dynamic, which is an absurd thing to point out, but yeah, I didn't like it. But, given how fixated Atlas was, I guess, he had to break off that part that was holding him down, in order for him to rise up again. So, bygones. 🤜🏻🤛🏻
I may have stumbled along the way, doubted a few steps in which the story turn, took a leap of faith for certain characters, and eventually came out on top believing that both Atlas and I would survive. Okay, that was a lame mountain pun! 😭 But, yes, this was an enjoyable read with a few bumps, but still definitely worth the read. It leaves you feeling inspired to scale your own mountain; that no matter if life seems like it's too much - just don't let go. One step forward and you'll find your way to the top. 🙏🏻
And if after I read this I went and listened to Miley Cyrus' 'Climb', then nobody's the wiser. 😊
*Thank you to Edelweiss for a DRC in exchange for an honest review.