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When Andrew, an American medical student, decides to climb Mt. Kilimanjaro with a group of international travelers, he’s looking forward to the adventure. But when the climb takes an unexpected turn, it forces the climbers to confront their deepest fears – and each other.
A group of young people from various countries have landed where their dreams have come alive: Mt. Kilimanjaro, the highest mountain in Africa and the highest single free-standing mountain above sea level in the world at 19,341 ft. Each and every person is desperate to climb this mountain as they believe it will empower them to fulfill their dreams. It does, but not in the way they were hoping. One of the group’s members, Barry, begins to show signs of altitude sickness, and it falls on Andrew to take care of him, with Barry’s girlfriend Eve helping to carry him. He is in terrible shape and must be taken back down the mountain, or he will die.
Andrew and Eve manage to get Barry to the base of the mountain and seek the help he desperately needs, but it is a grueling journey, fraught with danger and peril. The rest of the party reaches the saddle, a plateau between Mt. Kilimanjaro and Mt. Mawenzi in Tanzania, and are rewarded with a magnificent view of Africa and proceed to sign their accomplishments in a book stored in a wooden box at the top. But their success is quickly overshadowed by a mantle of shame for not helping one of their other teammates who was in dire need of assistance and putting their thirst for ascendancy over their friend’s life.
The overall story brings to light how people react under severe pressure and the guilt that can accompany decisions made under that emotional strain. A gripping and enthralling read that will keep you glued to its pages. Highly recommended.
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The book’s back cover presents the premise: Andrew, an American medical student, decides to climb Mt. Kilimanjaro with a group of international travelers, a climb that “takes an unexpected turn” when another would-be hiker, Barry, takes ill, and is confronted with the dilemma whether to attempt saving Barry and risk his own life.
We learn early Barry, a young Peace Corps worker, described multiple times as having been a Stanford student, “suddenly became ill.” Without spoiling the entire plot, there are six major episodes to the book: 1. The ascent. 2. The descent. 3. Andrew’s post-ascent trip to the Malindi seaside for some well-needed R&R. 4. His trip six months later to visit fellow hikers Klaus and Kara in Copenhagen, seeking their understanding and advice about his self-described “obsession.” 5. Nearly two years later his participation in San Francisco’s Bay to Breakers race. 6. The epilogue update, about a decade later, of Andrew’s life in Albuquerque in 1986.
Less than half the book is devoted to the ascent and the descent of Kilimanjaro. It is a tough slog, the weight of that journey, borne out in gruesome detail: more than two hundred references to Barry’s health (“cough,” “breathing,” “phlegm,” “blood,” “vomit,” “pink froth”). But stay with it, for the rest of the story makes this book worthwhile. It is in this balance of this tale that Andrew wrestles with the dilemmas of life: paths taken and not taken in love, career, and friendship, and confronting what matters, what is meaningful, and, at times, the way one betrays and advances one’s own best interests.
Thrown into the mix are bits of magic, not the least of which includes Andrew first encountering a stranger, a shaman-like African woman on a bus who single-handedly thwarts scoundrels from harming Andrew after their bus ride ends. She takes off in the crowd before he can thank her or know her name, but later, when Andrew enters a café in Malindi, Grace, the owner of the café, reappears where she provides a gift: a translucent moonstone. Reconnections with three separate individuals he’d known from his Kilimanjaro adventure also appear in San Francisco, but here the magic of “coincidence” seems more predetermined.
The ascent and descent, through the muck and mire of the bitter cold and Barry’s descending health, are sparse on dialogue, not unlike scenes from “The Revenant” with Leonard DiCaprio and Tom Hardy, filled with author Sklar’s take on Andrew’s silent introspections. But it is Andrew’s trip to Malindi, and the spirited dialogue with his love interest and others where the reader will be drawn in to what then develops into a real page-turner. As good as “Moonstone Hero” may be as a book, I think it would fare even better as a movie.