From Publishers Weekly
With assured plotting, pacing and characterization, Wolf (The Horsemasters) again convincingly imagines prehistoric people and events, this time transporting readers to the Europe of 12,000 years ago. When reindeer-essential for food, clothing and tools-begin to leave European lowland valleys for more abundant mountain pastures, it looks as though the matriarchal Kindred tribe will have to fight the patriarchal Norakamo nomads for new land and hunting rights. But Rorig, chief of the Kindred, and Tedrik, head of the Norakamo, wisely agree on a marriage between Tedrik's daughter, Alane, and Rorig's son, Nardo, a union that eventually unites their tribes, despite opposition from Nardo's powerful mother, Mara, and other enemies in both groups. Peace is short-lived, however, for soon the fierce Redu, who use bows and arrows, invade the mountain pastures even as Alane and Nardo struggle with cultural differences-and with sabotage by Mara, who fears the dissolution of matriarchal power. Matters come to a head in a dramatic battle whose conclusion finds Alane and Nardo positing a wise and hopeful resolution to the survivors of all three tribes. Despite some jarring anachronisms (after a fall, Nardo says, "I think I have a concussion"), this is, overall, a vividly told escape into the past. Literary Guild selection.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.
From Library Journal
Wolf's new work, the third novel she has set in the prehistoric French Pyrenees (following The Horsemasters, LJ 4/1/93), continues the saga of the Kindred tribe. The tribe's livelihood is threatened by global warming, since reindeer-the Kindred's primary source of food and clothing-are changing their migratory practices due to the weather. Discovering that the fierce Redu tribe is headed for their hunting grounds, the Kindred and Norakamo tribes, once adversaries, unite with the marriage of Alane of the Norakamo and Nardo of the Kindred. With its trite and unbelievable plot, this novel is not up to the standards of The Horsemasters. Nor does it compare favorably with the novels of Jean Auel and Linda Lay Shuler. Purchase only where the series is popular.
Mary Ellen Elsbernd, Northern Kentucky Univ. Lib., Highland HeightsCopyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.