PETER HELLER '82
The Guide
ALFRED A. KNOPF 272 PP. $27
PETER HELLER '82
The Guide
ALFRED A. KNOPF 272 PP. $27
Something Fishy
KINGFISHER LODGE, THE RUSTIC BUT HIGH-END fishing resort that is the setting for Heller’s entertaining new thriller The Guide, seems like a paradise at first, if you can afford it. The fenced-in compound, owned by a famous biotech entrepreneur, features gourmet meals and a mile and a half of one of the finest trout streams in the Rocky Mountains. It is the perfect escape for the celebrities and billionaires who frequent it—a refuge from the prying public and the coronavirus pandemic brewing just outside the gates.
But a few paragraphs in, the hero, Jack—a 25-year-old Colorado rancher, fishing guide, and Dartmouth alumnus still reeling from twin traumas inhis life—smells something fishy. During his orientation as the replacement for a fishing guide said to have quit, Jack is told that a special code is required to get in or out of the heavy metal gates. “Why do you need a code,” he wants to know, “to open it from the inside?”
It’s the first of several clues that the compound is far more sinister than the placid vacation hideaway it appears. After a day or two of blissful naturecommuning and a budding romance with his first fishing-guide client, a country music star named Alison K, Jack becomes increasingly aware of the constant video surveillance, black-clad security agents, strange comings and goings at the property next door, occasional gunfire (supposedly from an overprotective neighbor), and menacing mastiffs (another neighbor’s, allegedly).
That, regrettably, is the maximum plot summary allowable without spoilers, except to say that Jack and Alison, who becomes his partner in figuring out what’s really going on, proceed to take matters into their surprisingly capable, necessarily violent hands. It’s a neck-craning arc, for Jack in particular. One minute he’s waxing poetic about the glories of nature, quoting Basho from memory, and recalling a conversation he once had at college with novelist Marilynne Robinson. A few fast-paced chapters later, he’s proving himself handy with an assault rifle. Now that’s versatility!
What begins as high-quality popular fiction with literary leanings— Heller’s early chapters are full of richly detailed, almost ecstatic descriptions of the arcane world of fly fishing, along with some aching, elegantly handled reveries about Jack’s troubled past—finishes as a solid genre exercise in the bone-crunching mode of Lee Child’s Jack Readier novels. It’s tough out there.
—Kevin Nance
EDITOR’S PICKS
LOUISE ERDRICH ’76
The Sentence
HarperCollins
The tissue-thin separation between the living and the dead lies at the heart of this Pulitzer Prize-winning author’s latest novel. What starts as a gritty tale of a woman sentenced to 60 years in prison for absconding with a dead body unfolds into a slyly funny story. She gets out of prison early and happily marries the tribal cop who arrested her. But she must contend with a recently deceased woman who haunts her.
WILLIAM MEYER ’02
Healing Breath: A Guided Meditation through Nature for Kids
New World Library
A longtime teacher playfully introduces young readers to mindful breathing and meditation by taking them on an adventure around the planet’s colorful landscapes, which connects them with the beauty of the natural world. With illustrations by Brittany R. Jacobs, this charming book will appeal to adults as well as children.
BARTOW J. ELMORE ’04
Seed Money: Monsanto’s Past and Our Food Future
Norton
Monsanto genetically engineered seeds and transformed agriculture worldwide. It also produced the widely used but cancer-causing herbicide Roundup, as well as PCBs and Agent Orange. This sweeping investigation details how the firm suppressed evidence about the toxins, resulting in an avalanche of lawsuits and continuing consequences for public health and the food we eat.
REBECCA SACKS ’08
City of a Thousand Gates
HarperCollins
This debut novel plumbs the turbulent Israel-Palestine conflict through a collage of vivid characters whose lives intersect in unexpected ways. They each find themselves at a checkpoint—including a college student who enters Israeli territory illegally for work, a professor who fears she will die a lonely spinster, a social media influencer and her Israeli army reservist husband struggling with parenthood, a journalist covering the story of a Palestinian boy beaten into a coma, and a soccer star who was in the crowd that attacked the boy.
Additional titles and excerpts can be found on the DAM website.