Rating:
* For those of you who haven’t read The Mammoth Hunters yet, SPOILER ALERT!
Oh my goodness, this book was exhausting!
In The Plains of
Passage, Jean M. Auel’s fourth installment in the Earth’s Children series,
Ayla and Jondalar go on a year-long journey to travel back to Jondalar’s
people, known as the Zelandonii.
Just like with all of
the other books in the series, Auel does not fail to place her readers firmly
in the story. I applaud her incredible craftsmanship, but, due to that skill, I
too felt like I had gone on a journey of epic proportions. Can you even fathom
taking an entire year to get
somewhere?
Allow me to digress for just a moment to put this into
perspective. When I was about four years old, I went on a family road trip from
Florida to the Grand Canyon. I don’t remember how long it took us to get there
with all the stops we made along the way, but, according to MapQuest, it takes
about a day-and-a-half one way if you drive continuously.
(I tried to see how
long it would take to walk there since Ayla and Jondalar traveled by foot and
horseback, but MapQuest couldn’t even calculate it.)
By the time I got home from this trip, you’d better believe
I marched right into the house, grabbed my plastic Minnie Mouse chair, plopped
it in front of the television, and sat my butt down. True story. At such a
young age, even I understood that more than one day is too long to have to be on the road.
Yet Ayla and Jondalar dared to set out into the wilderness
for 365 days (give or take) through
fields of grass that towered over their heads, bug-infested swamplands that
made their skin itch, and many other treacherous landscapes.
Using one of my favorite suspense tricks, Auel also gave
them a pressing time limit in which they had to reach their destination. They
had to make it across an icy plateau glacier that lay at the end of their
journey before the end of winter. Otherwise, the ice would start to melt and it
would be too dangerous to cross.
Remember, this was long before the invention
of GPS, and there was hardly anyone around that you could stop and ask for
directions. One wrong turn and they’d never make it home.
While I was definitely anxious to see if they would get
there in time, this book still felt like it took forever to read. I was
probably more excited than Ayla and Jondalar by the time this trip was finally over.
So, book #4 in this series was given 3 Star-Lords. Excellent
attention to detail as usual, but a little too long of a trip for my tastes. I
think next time I’ll just stay home in my Minnie Mouse chair and leave it to someone
else to go traipsing through the plains of passage.
** I couldn't find a picture of me in my Minnie Mouse chair, so I've left you with the next best thing.
Mini me finds the lack of dinosaurs on this prehistoric trip to be highly disappointing. |
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