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One Wrong Step

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From #1 New York Times bestselling author Jennifer A. Nielsen comes a brand-new, spine-tingling adventure about two kids and their fight for survival on the unforgiving trails of Mount Everest. Jennifer Nielsen's storytelling climbs to new heights in this epic about loss, letting go, and the most important lesson a climber can learn: where the eye goes, a person follows.

For a climber, letting go means certain death. For Atlas, it means something even worse. But he'll have to learn how to let go and look up if he ever wants to see the top...

Twelve-year-old Atlas Wade has been trying to forget the memory of his mother by climbing mountains ever since she died when he was nine years old. When his father signs them up for an expedition group hoping to be the first to ever summit the unconquerable Mount Everest, Atlas can't wait for the chance to prove himself to his father, and maybe finally he can leave his mother behind him on the mountain.

But this time, Atlas is the one left behind, as well as a young American girl named Maddie and their sturdy yet injured Sherpa, Chodak. When news breaks out that war has returned to Europe, and that Nazis are attempting their own summit dangerously nearby, Atlas and Maddie plead with the expedition to come back down.

Their warnings come too late. Atlas looks up that same morning to see an avalanche and when they receive no word from the group, Maddie and Chodak join Atlas as he begins a dangerous journey up the mountain in the hopes of finding survivors.

Atlas, Maddie, and Chodak will have to rely not just on their own wits for survival, but on each other as well, especially as sickness, bad weather, and their fears of a Nazi spy watching them puts their mission — and lives — at risk in the brutal terrain. And Atlas will have to learn how to let go if he wants any chance of finding his father and fixing the rift between them caused by his mother's death, before it's too late.

Using one of the world's greatest — and most infamous — mountains as a backdrop, #1 New York Times bestselling author Jennifer A. Nielsen's storytelling climbs to new heights in this touching, thrilling epic about grief, letting go, and the bonds that keep us alive.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 16, 2024
      Just before WWII’s start in 1939—when no one had yet reached Mt. Everest’s summit—14-year-old white-cued Atlas Wade accompanies his father on a hazardous expedition to stand “at the top of the world.” During the excursion, the group learns that Nazis are attempting their own climb. Despite Atlas’s eagerness to finish the trek—born from his desire to escape grief surrounding his mother’s death three years ago—his father forbids him from making the final climb to the summit. While waiting at Advanced Base Camp at 21,300 feet, Atlas spies an avalanche around where the expedition should’ve been. Together with the daughter of another explorer and an injured adult Sherpa, Atlas determines to rescue them, using all the hiking skills his father taught him to survive. Employing her extensive mountain climbing experience—as outlined in an endnote—Nielsen (Uprising) details the activity’s pitfalls, hazards, and potential disasters with authenticity. The result is a gripping adventure tale that provides a new perspective through which to view the history of the era. An explanation of specific climbing terms begins each chapter; maps depicting Atlas’s progress scaling Everest feature throughout. Ages 8–12. Agent: Ammi-Joan Paquette, Erin Murphy Literary.

    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2025
      A 14-year-old British boy risks everything on Mount Everest when his father's expedition is in mortal peril. It's August 1939, and Atlas Wade and his father are climbing the tallest mountain in the world. Nobody has ever reached the summit of Mount Everest, but Atlas hopes to be among the first. Unfortunately, his father insists he remain at Advanced Base Camp while the adults forge on. The discovery of a German military boot print and a foreign rope adds intrigue, suggesting that the Nazis are attempting to be the first to summit. Then, following Germany's invasion of Poland, on the same day the British declare war on Germany, an avalanche endangers the climbers. Receiving only static on the radio, Atlas and Maddie, another expedition member's daughter, attempt to rescue their fathers with help from Chodak Sherpa. When Chodak is injured, Atlas must take the lead to get Chodak, Maddie (who has a terrible fear of heights), and the expedition climbers to safety, even if a Nazi spy may be watching them. Atlas initially feels more like a conduit for conveying nature facts and historical details to readers than an active participant in the events. But as the story progresses and the stakes are raised, both the narrative and Atlas find their interesting, if measured, strides. Western characters present white. A slightly uneven story of daring in the face of daunting odds. (map, author's note)(Historical fiction. 10-14)

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      February 1, 2025
      Grades 3-6 Mountaineering is something 14-year-old Atlas and his father "do to avoid talking about [Atlas'] mum," whose death weighs Atlas down with grief and resentment. Work brings the British pair to Tibet's Everest in 1939, where, as war and Nazis loom, they hope to be among the first group to reach the summit. After an avalanche buries the expedition team, Atlas and American Maddie Pierson, another child left at High Camp, stage an upper-mountain rescue. "This is a terrible idea," proclaims injured Sherpa Chodak, yet the pair persists. This high-altitude historical thriller unfolds faithfully to Nielsen's formula of youths in fairly improbable situations fending for themselves and gaining emotional insights through the process of survival. Climbing terms start each chapter, and though elements like expedition ethics and the costliness of simple mistakes ring true, the plot requires a massive suspension of disbelief. Hand to fans of Nielsen's prior work, to readers of Gordon Korman's Contest trilogy, and to anyone intrigued by the recent discovery of Sandy Irvine's remains on Everest.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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