



Above All Else
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- $10.99
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- $10.99
Publisher Description
In a novel as riveting, irresistible, and heartbreaking as Into Thin Air, teen climbing prodigies Rose and Tate attempt to summit--and survive--Mount Everest.
Rose Keller and Tate Russo have been climbing for years, training in harsh weather and traveling all over the world. The goal that kept them going? Summiting Mount Everest, the highest point on earth. Accompanied by Tate's dad, the two will finally make the ultimate climb at the end of their senior year. But neither Rose nor Tate are fully in the game--not only is there a simmering romance between them, but Rose can't get her mind off her mother's illness, while Tate constantly fails to live up to his ambitious father's standards.
Everyone on their expedition has something to prove, it seems. And not everyone is making the best decisions while short on oxygen and exhausted, body and mind. The farther up the mountain they go, the more their climbing plans unravel and the more isolated each team member becomes. Rose and Tate will have to dig deep within themselves to determine what--or who--they value above all else.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In her YA debut, children's author Levy (It Wasn't Me) offers a nail-biting adventure set in Nepal, where two recent high school graduates prepare for "the ultimate goal": climbing Mount Everest. Californians Rose and Tate, best friends and long-time climbing partners, have been dreaming about this trip for years, but conditions have changed now that their goal is within reach. Rose is making the climb not just for herself, but also for her Puerto Rican mother, who has been diagnosed with MS and can't accompany the teens as planned. Tate has had doubts about this journey after nearly losing his life on the duo's last expedition, to Mount Rainier. Still, he wants to prove he's not the "Master of Disaster," like his father thinks, and be with Rose, with whom he's in love. Written from the protagonists' alternating viewpoints, the book's main focus is not on the climb itself, but the teens' changing emotions, vulnerabilities, and profound realizations as they face the dangers ahead during training. Levy skillfully shows the sharp contrast between the experiences of the disadvantaged Sherpa guides, who risk their lives to get paid, and the privileged tourists paying thousands for a thrill, and draws on all five senses to bring Nepal's splendor to life. Ages 12 up.