![]() Outdoorsmen will find a great deal to appreciate in this book, as Heller’s background as a journalist for Outside magazine and National Geographic weaves in a true sense of adventure. ![]() The prose of the book is terse, but fluid, and mimics the world Hig finds himself in: one that is starkly populated but beautifully wild. ![]() It speaks to the human condition on a number of levels, examining survival, hope, love, and friendship with a deftness that is expertly applied. It’s restrained, beautiful, heartfelt, and simply fantastic. ![]() When Hig receives a strange transmission over the plane’s radio, it triggers the possibility of hope, ultimately sending Hig on a flight past the point of no return. Hig and Jasper fly the perimeter of camp in a 1956 Cessna, providing Heller with the perfect vessel for describing a world that is both lonely and scenic. The novel follows Hig and his dog Jasper, who have taken refuge in a small airport hanger in the mountains, and Bangley, an army-type survivalist who has set up camp with enough weapons and ammunition to stave off bands of wanderers. The Dog Stars by Peter Heller begins after a super-flu has wiped out nearly all of the world’s population. ![]()
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