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Peak: A Novel

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From Eric Sparling—author of Tantramar—comes a novel of horror that pits one man against nature . . . and against something wholly unnatural.



Phil Truss is a dead man walking. An inoperable brain tumour has sealed his fate, and there’s nothing he can do about it, even with his substantial fortune. But he can decide how to live his last remaining days.



And what he most wants is to achieve a feat few ever summiting the dreaded mountain K2. It’s the second highest peak in the world—and one of the most treacherous and deadly ascents known to man. Guided by a team of world-class climbers, Phil soon finds himself scaling the slopes, his dying wish in sight.



His dream quickly descends into a nightmare, however, as a series of mysterious and lethal events plagues Phil and his party, and he begins to sense they’re not accidents. At first, Phil believes his tumour is twisting his perception of reality. He couldn’t be more wrong. Because he’s slowly coming under the thrall of an ancient, malignant presence that has haunted K2 for years. But this entity doesn’t want Phil dead.



It wants something far more terrifying . . .



“The perfect setting for a supernatural thriller.” —Saltwire.com

281 pages, Kindle Edition

Published January 18, 2022

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Eric Sparling

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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Andrew Szalay.
32 reviews5 followers
May 12, 2022
It was intelligent, exciting, gross, at times nauseating and frightening, and I nearly quit reading it. But I am glad I toughed it out because the conclusion was climbing-history informed and damn witty.

Eric Sparling, a writer from Nova Scotia, wrote Peak published by Podium in 2022, didn’t set out to write a horror book about the supernatural. He liked monster movies like The Thing. And he had gathered a lot of convincing knowledge of high-altitude mountaineering that I was convinced and a climber-writer I referred the book to, who also read it, said it was good, “until it went batshit crazy.”

(Side note: I don’t like violent movies and I have never been inclined toward horror stories in books or movies because I think the real world has enough violence and frightening things; so I always try to pull back that veil of fear and find the beauty because of or in spite of the horrible things. I’ve watched a handful of movies, always with friends, and think fondly of The Others, The Ring, but when I tried reading Mexican Gothica by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, I couldn’t finish. So for Peak, I got the audio book and listened to it driving between meetings for a week. I need a little more old-fashioned grit, I suppose.)

Sparling tells us the story of Phil Truss, a divorced newly-rich aspiring climber who learned that a brain tumor may kill him within a year. His desires to climb mountains grows and decides he wants to die a mountaineer and what better mountain to climb than the Mountaineer’s Mountain, no not Rainier or even Robson, but K2. He hires Ukrainian superstar alpinist Ivan to be his guide (for the most of his remaining wealth,) and they’re off to the Karakoram.

The first three-fifths of the book Sparling does a reasonably convincing job of describing what the climb would be like from Phil’s newbie-amateur perspective. Phil may be paying the bill, but Ivan is the boss, trying to keep him alive, and more importantly, alive until he succeeds at reaching the top. But along the way, Phil experiences some unusual visions and hears voices. Of course, he has a brain tumor, which could cause that. Ivan even explains his experiences with feeling someone’s tangible presence helping him on a climb, but he was clearly and objectively alone. This was high-altitude climbing and many things can cloud our perspective, Ivan explains.

Phil realizes he can’t ignore the visions and voices he sees of the demon trapped around K2, which he names Varney. Varney chose to reveal himself to Phil because he was the first person ever to K2 wanting life but seeking death. As we read on, as an intriguing detail, we learn that even Aleister Crowley, the Wickedest Man in the World, didn’t have the advantage Phil had in connecting with Varney.

After Sparling’s witting storytelling, my favorite aspect was how Phil dealt with the blog’s, social media outrage, and disgust from other climbers on K2 that he didn’t belong on the mountain. There were opinion pieces lambasting him for being a privileged, rich man buying his way to the top. He weighed that heavily. Was he a fraud? If he lived longer than expected, he would never be a peer to the climbers that climbed and worked for years and decades to top out on K2. He was getting a crash course and practically pulled up the mountain by Ivan, Dawa, and to some extent supernatural forces. In the end, Phil comes to peace within himself about it, but it’s quickly dashed by Varney’s plot being unveiled and what horrifying things Phil must do to transcend into the supernatural.

Other than my reservations about violence and the horrible descriptions of putrid smells (I have to give him high points for “raw vegetables reduced to liquid fermented in a coffin,”) there were two aspects that fell flat for me: First, Dawa, a professional climber on Ivan’s expedition team, was referred to as just “the Sherpa” on several occasions. Perhaps that was intended as a title of respect, but I wasn’t sure it was appropriate today. Lastly, Phil had an amateur perspective that all climbers facing a climbing challenge “storm the gates of hell” to ascend to the top of any peak, especially a dangerous one like K2. That attitude was something I thought too before I started climbing beyond bouldering and reading so many, many more first-hand non-fiction accounts. No climber is so brave and perhaps it was more tied to the book’s theme, but it wasn’t rooted in reality and I think a climber, even one unique like Phil, would understand the calculated risk management that there was no storming anything.

For mountaineering literature, I think it is hard to write something authentic without it being nonfiction. But there are exceptions. Comedy like The Ascent of Rum Doodle comes to mind. And now, for me, so does Peak. I recommend it for climbers and anyone that reads this blog willing to read a supernatural story because the twist at the end is smart and admirable, but you’ll have to go enjoy the whole adventure to find out what I mean.

Originally posted on https://suburbanmountaineer.com/
Profile Image for Mae MacCallum.
Author 4 books17 followers
March 17, 2022
I loved this book. I read it in one sitting. I was looking for horror on a mountain climbing/Everest kind of book and this is exactly that. I think it found a healthy balance between the real life scary of the environment and the supernatural scary that starts to creep up on the protagonist.
Profile Image for Michele.
124 reviews
February 9, 2022
I will start off by telling you that I have no interest in climbing mountains, I know nothing about it, and I have no interest in reading about it. That being said, I was fascinated by this story. The explanations and detail put me right there with our main character. I wasn't bored with it as I expected to be. I definitely have a new respect for the people that do this. I was gripped by the story from the beginning and toward the middle, I had to wonder, is this madness caused by a brain tumor or something supernatural? You can feel the peace and tranquility as well as the danger and foreboding through the writing. Job well done.
Profile Image for kylie.
272 reviews8 followers
December 18, 2023
I was enjoying the chaos, but the last 90 pages or so was just a fever dream. I don't know if I'm supposed to think it was real or what. It was so messy and weird that it just felt dissatisfying.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Ruth Fabiano.
258 reviews6 followers
January 17, 2024
Was the main character supposed to have appeared as unlikable and unsympathetic as possible? I wanted him to die! There was no one to root for, except for the poor guides and sherpas.

I liked it, but I would have liked to had the mythos expanded more and explained. There shouldve been more "terror" and appearances of menace. It just seemed uneven. Chapter after chapter of boring technical jargon punctuated with Varney. I have so many questions- why doesnt he kill every climber? Why just some? Why wouldnt he want Phil to help "free" him from the Mountain where he was trapped? Why was he trapped? What was he? The Devil, a Devil? Did he eat people? So many unanswered questions and all we got was a whiny, rich coward who got a lot of other people killed. SMH.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
14 reviews
July 6, 2024
This is a fast moving and exciting story. However, it suffers from an often confusing and somewhat incoherent time line.
Profile Image for Jackie Gould.
10 reviews
August 12, 2024
It was not my kind of story, but the writing was very realistic and compelling.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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