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391 pages, Hardcover
First published May 31, 2016
Around him the sea is pockmarked and ever changing. Swimming, he tries not to think about the great tracts of open water. He tries not to picture the depth of the ocean or how the Atlantic in August is the birthplace of massive storm fronts, hurricanes that form in the cold troughs of undersea gorges, weather patterns colliding, temperature and moisture forming huge pockets of low pressure. Global forces conspiring, barbarian hordes with clubs and war paint who charge shrieking into the fray, and instantly the sky thickens, blackens, an ominous gale of lightning strikes, huge claps of thunder like the screams of battle, and the sea, which moments ago was calm, turns to hell on earth.
Scott swims in the fragile calm, trying to empty his mind.
Something brushes up against his leg…
BEFORE THE FALL begins with the crash of a private plane and the heroics of one man, then reverts to give background stories of each of the 11 passengers and crew members telling how they came to be on the downed aircraft. With each story, the reader is provided with possible clues of what caused the disaster.
Scott's story as a young lad, of how he decided to become a swimmer, using good old Jack LaLanne as an inspiration is the best, of course, but how he uses his strength and determination to accomplish an amazing feat while reflecting on his own life's ups and downs is the meat of the novel, "and".......his communication skills dealing with the low-life media man Cunningham......the icing on the cake.
While some of the back stories were a bit wordy with details that seemed unnecessary, I still could not stop reading, and the ending, well, it was okay, scary really and plausible.
A bit disappointed overall, but am still rounding up.....go figure.
Something brushes against his leg.This push to survive against incredible odds is truly gripping.
He freezes, starts to sink, then has to kick his legs to stay afloat.
Shark, he thinks.
You have to stay still.
But if he stops moving he'll drown.
He rolls over on his back, breathing deeply to inflate his chest. He has never been more aware of his tenuous place on the food chain.
He was a disaster survivor in that he had survived the disaster that was his life. And so that's what he painted.Ultimately this is a novel about coping with whatever disasters life might bring, large or small, and being a survivor. It's a solid, tense novel and a compelling story, but it was the periodic flashes of insight that made it a memorable read for me.