The Transall Saga by Gary Paulsen

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(Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)

  • Publisher: Random House Childrens Books
  • Pub. Date: October 1999
  • ISBN-13: 9780440219767
  • Sales Rank: 22,490
  • Age Range: Young Adult
  • 248pp
  • Edition Description: Reprint
 
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Synopsis

Mark's solo camping trip in the desert turns into a thrilling and terrifying odyssey when a mysterious beam of light transports him to another time on what appears to be another planet.

As Mark searches for a pathway back to his own time on earth, he must make a new life in a new world. His encounters with primitive tribes bring the joy of human bonds, but violence and war as well--and, finally, a contest in which he discovers his own startling powers.

Annotation

While backpacking in the desert, thirteen-year-old Mark falls into a tube of blue light and is transported into a more primitive world, where he must use his knowledge and skills to survive.

Publishers Weekly

Paulsen (Brian's Winter) works his magic with another wilderness adventure yarn. But the wilderness this time isn't in this worldor is it? That's what 13-year-old Mark tries to discover. On his first solo backpacking trip, crossing an old missile range in a desert out west, a mysterious blue light transports him to a thick red jungle under a sulfurous sky. There the struggle for survival soon supersedes the quest for the route home. Paulsen draws on such Saturday-matinee staples as poisonous insects, deadly quicksand and murderous beasts; Mark even swings on vines with a friendly monkey-like creature (and this is just the first 30 pages). Yet the plot feels fresh, thanks to the author's taut, unsentimental storytelling (Mark's Tarzan-esque antics, for example, result in broken ribs). Mark grows to manhood in the four or so years of his sojourn; the narrative, meanwhile, continues at a hurtling pace. The teen saves a girl's life, then joins her tribe of forest-dwellers; later, he is captured with them and enslaved by the more technologically advanced Tsook people. There are raids, escapes and brushes with the Tsook overlord, the Merkon, who takes a frighteningly keen interest in Mark. Readers may figure out who the Merkon is long before the protagonist does, but no matterthe action along the way (including just the right dash of romance) is never less than enthralling. While the story is self-contained, the end points to a sequel, so, with any luck, another installment is on the way. Ages 12-up. (May)

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Customer Reviews

WOW!!!by Anonymous

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September 19, 2008: this book was the best book i've read this year so far. It was amazing!! I just cant think of any other book to pick if your looking for a good science fiction. I was kind of disappointed with the ending however, I mean he just got home. The epiloge was interesting though..........

crazy campingby Anonymous

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July 29, 2008: Great book to read though it wasn't the best i think in some parts of the book are real thrillers


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