Oh man, why have I not read a KG MacGregor book before? Another shame on me. I’ve been lucky with my Fallback books so far because they’ve all been outstanding reads. This book was published in early 2009 so I think it still makes it under the wire for Fallback.
We meet Mary Kate who is trying to settle into small town life in Georgia and accept the inevitability of marrying nice guy Bobby, have children, and teach until retirement. That’s what everybody does and she can’t disappoint her family or veer too far off course. Only, Mary Kate is just 24 years old and she’s got this deep down suspicion that there’s more to her and a much bigger world that she’s afraid to miss if she follows course. So in a brave move of insane proportions, she’s inspired to travel to Africa to do the Kilimanjaro hike. She plans, trains hard, and saves money diligently because she’s still cautious Mary Kate. The family and Bobby wave goodbye, shake their heads, and off she goes.
Addison too is being pushed into a life she does not want. Uber successful Reginald Falk is a London financier who expects his daughter to follow in his footsteps and has basically painted her into a corner. Her trip to Kilimanjaro is both a fundraiser and one last independent decision before leaving Miami to join her father’s world.
Mary Kate and Addison meet in Africa and build a charming bond that absolutely melts your heart. It’s pure author’s skill that makes you believe that their friendship and romance are genuine after only two weeks on the mountain. The rest of the characters, who are all part of their climbing group, are distinct and funny. The dialogue is crisp and clever. But the hike itself is another star in this book. We get a lot of technical information but because it’s seamlessly intertwined with the characters’ actions, it goes down easy and sets the place in picturesque details.
Big winner for me.