The Last Days of Everest

A Debt Long Overdue -- To be Paid in Blood

by Dean Allen


Formats

Softcover
$11.99
$8.70
Hardcover
$22.49
$13.70
E-Book
$8.99
Softcover
$8.70

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 8/4/2010

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 160
ISBN : 9781452022338
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 160
ISBN : 9781452022345
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : E-Book
Page Count : 160
ISBN : 9781452022352

About the Book

Members of a Nepalese family are embroiled in a blood feud that is decades old.

The feud involves the legitimate property rights to land which members of the family have shared for over a century.

China, to the east, gets involved when she sends an emissary (agent) to mediate the dispute over the land in question.  The emissary is not forthright when he portrays the ownership of the land to be that of one of the two individuals involved in the dispute.  He has lied to the man.

The emissary had reasons of his own for the dispute to devolve into a bloody battle.

A massacre results, with the deaths of all but the youngest son of one of the men involved in the dispute.

Years pass, and China has found out that the Himalayan Plateau has an immense pocket of geothermal energy deep below the surface.  She desperately needs to gain access and control of this energy source for her to become a major world power in the next century.

China sees this one particular family’s blood feud as an opportunity to tap this energy source with whatever means necessary, and focus the blame on someone else.

China’s plot is successful, but it doesn’t go exactly as planned.


About the Author

Dean Allen (Dean Allen Boring) is the author of Legends of Everest.  He wrote a lot in college, which was a long time ago (42 years).  He is 65 years old, and retired.  He is an avid mystery lover, as reflected in the second story of his first book, The Everest Stone.  He has always been a fan of adventure.  He has been fascinated with Mount Everest, the country of Nepal, and her people.  Because the mountain has always been the focal point of interest for the outside world, he felt that the people of Nepal and their story has largely been ignored.  This is his main reason for writing this book.