76 pages • 2 hours read
Roland SmithA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
Released in 2007, Roland Smith’s YA novel Peak is the story of Peak Marcello, a teenager and mountain climbing prodigy. The novel is the first of four books in the Peak Marcello Adventure series, followed by The Edge (2015), Ascent (2018), and Descent (2020). The story follows Peak as he reconnects with his estranged father, Josh, who takes him on a climbing expedition to Mt. Everest. Peak is set against the backdrop of the political tensions between Tibet, China, and the largely Western tourists who comprise the Everest expeditions. The lives of the Sherpas, who are often relegated to servant status, are also an important facet of the novel. Its main themes include Friendship and Competition, Fatherhood’s Meaning, and Passion Versus Obsession. Smith is a New York Times bestselling author and has published over 20 young adult novels and nonfiction works.
Plot Summary
When Peak is 14 years old, he climbs a skyscraper in New York to spray paint his tag on it: a small, blue mountain. He is caught and arrested. As he waits for a hearing in front of the judge, another boy tries to emulate him by scaling a building and falls to his death. Peak’s attorney says the state wants to make an example of him by holding him responsible for the other boy’s death. He could potentially face three years in juvenile detention and then be tried as an adult.
Peak’s estranged father, Josh Wood, appears at the last moment with bail money and a plan. He will take Peak to live with him in Thailand, which will allow Peak to escape the oppressive media attention and the detention center. Josh and Peak’s mother, Teri, were once a climbing team that set several world climbing records and had lucrative support from sponsors. When Teri fell during a climb and broke her back, her climbing career ended. Joshua continued to travel, climb, and teach, robbing Peak of a chance to know him. Before he leaves New York, Peak says goodbye to his stepfather Rolf, his mother, and his younger twin sisters.
When they arrive in Bangkok, Josh has a surprise for him. He is going to take Peak on an attempt to reach the summit of Mount Everest. If he succeeds, Peak will be the youngest climber to reach the summit. This is a dream come true, but Peak soon develops reservations. He learns that Josh’s company is in trouble. Josh hopes to save his business through the media exposure that Peak’s climb will bring Josh. When Peak asks Josh if that was one of the reasons for helping him avoid the juvenile detention center, he says yes. But Josh also says that he wants to use this chance to take responsibility and become a real father.
Peak soon meets a Buddhist monk named Zopa who will accompany them on the climb along with his grandson, Sun-jo. A reporter named Holly Angelo—who is hoping to write an exclusive story about Peak—has also managed to get herself onto the expedition.
Their time on the mountain involves various dangerous situations in which they move from camp to camp, fighting storms, and letting their blood oxygen levels acclimate to the increasingly dangerous elevation. As they climb, Peak continues to feel ambivalent about his father, especially when he learns that Sun-jo is almost the same age as him. If Sun-jo completes the climb and he does not, Josh will still be able to say that his expedition was responsible for the youngest climber ever to reach the summit of Everest.
When they finally reach the top, Peak realizes that Sun-jo will benefit more from the fame than he will. He lets Sun-jo reach the summit first and films him. Peak gives up his dream to help someone else. Afterward, he decides that he is ready to go back to New York. He is no longer interested in climbing Everest or pretending that Josh will be the father he needs.
By Roland Smith