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Richie's Picks: PEAK by Roland Smith,  Harcourt, May 2007, ISBN: 0-15-202417-4
 
"Spent a little time on the mountain, spent a little time on the hill"
 -- Hunter/Garcia
 
"This is it, I told myself.  Fifteen more  handholds and I've topped it.
"I reached up for the next seam and encountered a little  snag.  Well, a big 
snag really...
"My right ear and cheek were frozen to the terra cotta  wall.
"To reach the top you must have resolve, muscles, skill,  and...
"A FACE!"
"Mine was anchored to that wall like a bolt, and a portion of  it stayed 
there when I gathered enough resolve to tear it loose.   Now I was mad, which was 
exactly what I needed to finish the climb.  
"Cursing with every vertical lunge, I stopped about four feet  below the 
edge, tempted to tag this monster with the blood running down my  neck.  But 
instead I took the mountain stencil out of my pack (cheating, I  know, but you have 
to have two free hands to do it freehand), slapped it on the  wall, and 
filled it in with blue spray paint.
"This is when the helicopter came up behind me and nearly blew  me off the 
wall.
" 'You're under arrest!' an amplified voice shouted above the  deafening 
rotors."
 
There is a good reason why fourteen-year-old Peak  Marcello has been stuck 
practicing his climbing skills amidst the skyscrapers of  Manhattan.  But now 
that he has been caught tagging and summating the  Woolworth Building, there is 
also a good reason why it is necessary  for him to be away from New York for a 
while.
 
Fortunately, the professional-climbing father he has not  seen in seven years 
gets word of Peak's widely-reported escapades and related  legal 
difficulties, and before the teenager's face can even begin to  heal, Peak Marcello 
finds 
himself halfway around the world in Kathmandu --  his first stop on the way to 
possibly becoming the youngest climber to ever  conquer Mount Everest. 
 
"I'd read at least a dozen books about conquering 8,000-meter  peaks (peaks 
above 26,000 feet), including the three books my father had  written.  There 
are fourteen of those peaks in the world.  
"It can take at least two months to get to the top of  Everest, which is 
actually 8,850 meters tall.  The long climbing time is  not because of the 
distance, which is less than five miles, but because it's  up.
"Most of the climbing time is spent sitting in the six camps  along the 
route, letting your body get used to the thin air.  If you go up  too fast you 
might get mountain sickness, or high altitude pulmonary edema  (HAPE).  Here's how 
HAPE works: your lungs fill with fluid, you can't  breath, you go into a 
coma, then you die."
 
Peak's need to concentrate on the life-and-death struggle that  exists for 
anyone preparing to climb Everest (and return  alive) is constantly being 
impeded by the political complications that  exist for climbers of the northern 
(Tibetan) side which is supervised  by the Chinese military, by Peak's attempts to 
understand his father's long  absence from his life, and by a female reporter 
who had covered his Manhattan  skyscraper exploits and who appears at the 
base camp in Tibet with  her personal chef, masseuse, and camera crew.
 
As he "climbs high and sleeps low," progressing  through the stages that will 
prepare him for his shot at the summit, Peak  Marcello discovers where the 
similarities between himself and his father  begin and end, and decides for 
himself what in life really  counts.   
 
A few years ago, I read TO THE TOP by Stephen Venables, an  excellent, 
photo-filled book for adolescents about the history of climbing  Everest and that 
author's own successful climb.  It will serve as a  great follow-up for readers 
who are enthralled by this rewarding  and death-defying tale and who aren't 
yet ready to leave the mountain  behind.   

Richie  Partington, MLIS
Richie's Picks http://richiespicks.com
Moderator,  http://groups.yahoo.com/group/middle_school_lit/
BudNotBuddy@aol.com
http://www.myspace.com/richiespicks






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