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On Heaven's Hill

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Finalist for the 2023 Banff Mountain Book Award for Mountain Fiction & Poetry
An Anchorage Daily News Favorite Book of 2023

Kim Heacox, author of the National Outdoor Book Award-winning novel Jimmy Bluefeather, returns with a new, brilliant novel about family love and the lengths one will go to protect it.

"A sprawling novel brimming with suspense, ideas and unforgettable characters, On Heaven's Hill paints a captivating group portrait of a rebel alliance discovering their true selves in America's most glorious natural landscape. This book will appeal equally to aging idealists reared on Edward Abbey and adventurous kids hooked on Gary Paulsen. Oh, and it's laugh-out-loud funny, too."
Mark Adams, New York Times bestselling author of Tip of the Iceberg and Turn Right at Machu Picchu

"Kim Heacox poses the age-old question—what price progress?—with new urgency in On Heaven's Hill, his compelling novel of an Alaskan hamlet whose remote location is no defense against big-money development. All that stands in its way is a pack of wolves and the twelve-year-old girl determined to save them. Reminiscent of John Nichols' The Milagro Beanfield War, Heacox deftly weaves lyrical tributes to the healing power of nature with a fast-paced plot that builds to a heart-pounding conclusion."
Gwen Florio, author of Silent Hearts and the Lola Wicks series

The small town of Strawberry Flats sits on a remote Alaska coast, peacefully left to itself—until controversial plans for a road and a bridge threaten to upend everything.

Former trapper Salt d'Alene never thought he'd find himself in the midst of such a dispute, but he'll do anything to provide the best care for his son Solomon, recently diagnosed with muscular dystrophy. Eleven-year-old Kes Nash just wants her father—back from war in Afghanistan—to be normal again. And circling the perimeter of the town is a wolf, Silver, and his pack, quietly watching.

Told from three alternating perspectives, On Heaven's Hill is a vividly powerful story about rediscovering hope and finding new life in the aftermath of trauma. Filled with humor and compassion, it depicts the best of America, a place composed of wildness and kindness.

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    • Kirkus

      Heacox's novel follows three overlapping lives in a remote Alaskan town. Salt d'Alene is a devout Christian and former trapper who lives with his family in the coastal Alaskan village of Strawberry Flats. He's trying to provide for his wife, Hannah, and four sons--including Solomon, who has muscular dystrophy--but money's tight even after working 60 hours a week at a mechanic shop. Salt gets a covert offer that could pay for his son's medical treatment and requires him to keep an eye on the pack of wolves that's recently taken up residence near town. The wolves include Silver, a young male with exceptional hunting abilities, even if the rest of the pack fails to appreciate them--a mistake, given how scarce food has become. Eleven-year-old Kes Nash has just moved to her uncle's compound outside of Strawberry Flats. Her father hasn't spoken since his Humvee was blown up in Afghanistan--an incident that cost him his legs--and the family hopes time in remote Alaska will help him recover. The community of veterans living there isn't thrilled when they learn that a road and bridge are planned that will connect Strawberry Flats with the rest of the world--a scheme that will also affect the fate of Silver's pack of wolves. The novel's painterly prose evokes Alaska as a place of great beauty and scarcity, where animals of all sorts compete for space and food: "Silver awakens, startled by the moonlight and a deep-throated growling coming from the direction of the dead whale. On his feet in an instant, he travels fast through the shadowed forest....He finds the big male coastal brown bear atop one end of the whale, near the head." Salt is an especially memorable character of fascinating contradictions. The book mostly manages to overcome the sentimentality of its premise (sympathetic wolf point of view, wounded war veteran) to present a well-plotted tale of frontier utopianism that should appeal to nature lovers. A deftly told story of the difficulties that come from living close to the wild.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

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subjects

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:810
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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