My Uncle Bill and his Love Everest

A romantic story

Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book My Uncle Bill and his Love Everest by Peter Jalesh, BookRix
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Peter Jalesh ISBN: 9783730920213
Publisher: BookRix Publication: September 19, 2013
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Peter Jalesh
ISBN: 9783730920213
Publisher: BookRix
Publication: September 19, 2013
Imprint:
Language: English

The novel portrays three main characters in pursuit of their dreams. The main character is Molly, a woman that becomes a jockey and pursues her dream to win the Triple Crown derbies trophy. As the story evolves she proves to have an enormous resilience in the face of a disabling illness that affects her life and her career. What becomes predominant in Molly's quest for glory is the tie between her and the champion horse. Their love for each other – either in good fortune or in tragedy - reaches further than their aspirations to achieve glory. The next character in line is Uncle Bill, who comes to realize one day that his life lacks a higher purpose. To make up for it he designs an ultimate adventure for himself which he calls "Project Everest". Eventually Uncle Bill goes and climbs Mt. Everest and never returns from there. Reaching that peak becomes an end in itself. Did Uncle Bill succeed to arrive at that peak? Later on, a salvage team finds on the mountain peak Uncle Bill's watch, hidden under a rock. What belongs to a larger than life story is that Uncle Bill's preparation for climbing Mt. Everest becomes a vital activity at all population levels. It looks as if each life prepares itself to help Uncle Bill triumph over defiance. What Uncle Bill's project proves to others is that conquering the impossible is a human trait that belongs to all of us, an aspiration of all of us to overcome the impossible. The third character that gathers attention is the teen author that lives though those events and discovers what love is. The background of the story is made up of farmlands, a bunch of neighboring farms on which the principal activity is growing animals like pigs, burrows and thoroughbred studs. It is not difficult to interpret the motives interleaved by the story as being symbolic. Molly's desire to win the Triple Crown begins with a fortunate chance and ends with another chance – an unfortunate one, an accidental chance. Uncle's Bill's climbing of Mt. Everest is the result of a careful planning that ends in an illusive victory. Both fates described above are metaphors. The sense implied here is that the pursuit of fame, success, and victory is beyond life. That is, happiness is doomed to failure in the quest of the impossible; also that the boundaries of what is given to us to live are finite, prone to chance and accident.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The novel portrays three main characters in pursuit of their dreams. The main character is Molly, a woman that becomes a jockey and pursues her dream to win the Triple Crown derbies trophy. As the story evolves she proves to have an enormous resilience in the face of a disabling illness that affects her life and her career. What becomes predominant in Molly's quest for glory is the tie between her and the champion horse. Their love for each other – either in good fortune or in tragedy - reaches further than their aspirations to achieve glory. The next character in line is Uncle Bill, who comes to realize one day that his life lacks a higher purpose. To make up for it he designs an ultimate adventure for himself which he calls "Project Everest". Eventually Uncle Bill goes and climbs Mt. Everest and never returns from there. Reaching that peak becomes an end in itself. Did Uncle Bill succeed to arrive at that peak? Later on, a salvage team finds on the mountain peak Uncle Bill's watch, hidden under a rock. What belongs to a larger than life story is that Uncle Bill's preparation for climbing Mt. Everest becomes a vital activity at all population levels. It looks as if each life prepares itself to help Uncle Bill triumph over defiance. What Uncle Bill's project proves to others is that conquering the impossible is a human trait that belongs to all of us, an aspiration of all of us to overcome the impossible. The third character that gathers attention is the teen author that lives though those events and discovers what love is. The background of the story is made up of farmlands, a bunch of neighboring farms on which the principal activity is growing animals like pigs, burrows and thoroughbred studs. It is not difficult to interpret the motives interleaved by the story as being symbolic. Molly's desire to win the Triple Crown begins with a fortunate chance and ends with another chance – an unfortunate one, an accidental chance. Uncle's Bill's climbing of Mt. Everest is the result of a careful planning that ends in an illusive victory. Both fates described above are metaphors. The sense implied here is that the pursuit of fame, success, and victory is beyond life. That is, happiness is doomed to failure in the quest of the impossible; also that the boundaries of what is given to us to live are finite, prone to chance and accident.

More books from BookRix

Cover of the book DIE TERRANAUTEN, Band 11: PLANET DER LOGENMEISTER by Peter Jalesh
Cover of the book Flight 117 by Peter Jalesh
Cover of the book Tiger schnurren nicht by Peter Jalesh
Cover of the book Der Teufel hinter der Wand by Peter Jalesh
Cover of the book Déviance: Gefährliche Lust by Peter Jalesh
Cover of the book The Pretty Teen by Peter Jalesh
Cover of the book Idle Thoughts by Peter Jalesh
Cover of the book Die Fratze by Peter Jalesh
Cover of the book Bis Donnerstag by Peter Jalesh
Cover of the book Think Like A Trillionaire by Peter Jalesh
Cover of the book Erotische Kurzgeschichten - Best of 09 by Peter Jalesh
Cover of the book Meine Reise um die Welt – Zweite Abteilung by Peter Jalesh
Cover of the book 20 Secrets To Dieting Success by Peter Jalesh
Cover of the book Roter Romeo by Peter Jalesh
Cover of the book Jesus Christus in Pilanesberg by Peter Jalesh
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy