High Hunt

High Hunt

Hardback edition of High Hunt, 1973
Author David Eddings
Cover artist One Plus Media
Country United States
Language English
Genre Fiction/Suspense
Publisher G.P. Putnam's Sons
Publication date
1973
Media type Hardcover, Paperback, Kindle
Pages 384 pp (Hardback)
ISBN 9780006475934 (newer edition)

High Hunt is the first published novel of David Eddings, first copyrighted in 1973 by a private publisher, its copyright was renewed in 1993 in New York and then in 1994 by Del Rey books in London. His first novel and one of only two "mainstream novels"[1] he wrote during his career. While it is not fantasy as are most of Eddings' other books, it still shares similarities with most of them as the book focuses on the main character maturing, falling in love, and overcoming personal tragedy. The story is written from the first person perspective though the eyes of Dan Alders, a soldier back from the Vietnam War and on a hunting trip with his estranged brother Jack and some "friends": Cal, Lou, and Stan. During the hunt, tensions and old hatreds rise and escalate into open fighting. The story takes place in the Cascade Mountains, in Washington state U.S.

Plot

The prologue begins the story by introducing the characters of Dan and Jack as children as their father tells them a story.

Reception and reviews

While this book is generally rated lesser in comparison to Eddings' later and more popular works, it has nonetheless enjoyed modest popularity, though this is largely by Eddings fans who see it to be a welcome break from the general fantasy offerings of the author. The story is generally well received on Amazon[2] with fair ratings (as of July 2015) on Goodreads,[3] though many readers comment that the dated language and descriptions detract from the enjoyment of the book. Those who strongly praise the book do so for its honest representation of mankind and its vivid descriptions of the mountain settings.

References

Sources

Teehan, John D. "Eddings, David 1931–." Supernatural Fiction Writers: Contemporary Fantasy and Horror. Ed. Richard Bleiler. 2nd ed. Vol. 1. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 2003. 323-330. Scribner Writers on GVRL. Web. 29 Oct. 2014.

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