![]() At the heart of the novel is how her four main characters – aspiring explorer Fred, gloriously spiky Con and Brazilian siblings Lila and Max – embark on a journey of self-discovery, coming to terms with their situation and finding the bravery and ingenuity they need. The early 20th-century setting disallows the pesky interference of modern technology, lending a timeless feel to the plot. The mystery deepens when the discovery of a map suggests they are not the first humans to find this place. But it’s also a place of wonder: Rundell’s rich, descriptive prose will transport her young readers to a mesmerising world where they can swim with river dolphins, eat a tarantula and discover a ruined city. ![]() They are alone and in absolute peril, without food or water, at the mercy of the ferocious jungle. ![]() Readers are plunged, quite literally, into a wildly exciting adventure when four children crash-land hundreds of miles from civilisation after their pilot suffers a heart attack. ![]() F rom the whimsical streets of Victorian Paris in Rooftoppers to the frozen white plains of Russia in The Wolf Wilder, Katherine Rundell conjures an extraordinary sense of place in her novels, no more so than in the lush Amazon rainforest of her latest. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |