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Zan-Gah: A Prehistoric Adventure: Zan-Gah Series, Book 1
 
 

Zan-Gah: A Prehistoric Adventure: Zan-Gah Series, Book 1 [Kindle Edition]

Allan Richard Shickman
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

Digital List Price: £7.63 What's this?
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Product Description

Product Description

Zan-Gah, seeking his lost twin brother in a savage prehistoric world, encounters adventure, suffering, conflict, captivity, and final victory. In three years hero passes from an uncertain boyhood to a tried and proven manhood and a position of leadership among his people. Themes include survival, brotherhood, cultures, gender roles, psychological trauma, and nature's wonders and terrors. This is the electronic version of Zan-Gah: A Prehistoric Adventure, which has been awarded Mom's Choice Gold Medal for Series, the Eric Hoffer Notable Book Award, and was a finalist for ForeWord Magazine Book of the Year.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 268 KB
  • Print Length: 164 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0979035708
  • Publisher: Earthshaker Books (16 Jun 2010)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B003TSE05G
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #421,236 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
With the saturation of the YA market with futuristic and dystopian adventure novel, reading Zan Gah was a fresh distraction.

Zan Gah is a fast-paced, vivid and riveting read that excited my adventurous, archaeology-crazy self. The prehistoric landscape at which the adventures of Zan Gah was set was richly depicted and impressively pictured. Never was the description overpowering - it was just a delicate balance of the right words, which supported well the prehistoric setting. At certain scenes, I could almost see it as vividly as if I myself were part of Zan Gah's adventures and misfortunes; there were times I felt as if my ears have been filled with war cries and drum beats and my heart racing even though I was quite at peace reading on the lounge. Such is Allan Richard Shickman's talent in story-telling that I, a reader from the faraway future, almost tangibly experienced the adventure and appreciated, not to mention completely envied, the beauty of the unrestrained nature of Zan Gah's time.

Each of the characters in the book were well drawn and were given sufficient attention, so each of them grows to be relatable, admirable, individual and most of all alive. Personally it is this fact - that I found the characters so wholly described and personified that they take on life - that made the adventures in the book so engaging. I also vastly enjoyed each of the clans and the respective culture that is introduced to the reader as Zan Gah interacts with them. Best of all, I value the brotherhood that drives the hero - the bond he shares with his twin, Dael, but also with his family, friends, Rydl and Chul, and neighouring comrades.

Although the book starts off slow and have few and ignorable inconsistencies with its pacing, I found that the tension was set well and Shickman's ability to pull the strings together and let go of the tension at the most crucial point in the plot proves well to its readers. The writing style reminds me of Philip Pullman, the master story teller whose works I can only praise. Indeed, Shickman's Zan Gah is well suited suited for both the young and the old, and everyone else in between.

Having said that however, I must also mention that the cover completely deprives the book justice. One look at it and I would never have inched closer to it on a bookstore shelf. Such beautiful, award-winning book deserves more than the less-than-flattering cover. Although an important aspect of the plot, I think the lioness is not the definitive part of the novel, so I keep wondering why it is featured so prominently on the cover. More so, the cover makes the book look as if it is a children's picture book, which is completely misleading as it is very well capable of catering to the older generation.

Nonetheless, do not let the cover deter you! Zan Gah is an exciting adventurous read sure to entertain both the young and the old.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  34 reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Couldn't put it down 9 Aug 2007
By J. Routh - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
I spent a wonderful evening reading this book. It is very well written and quite engaging. I am long past adolescence but still enjoyed the book immensely. This is a book for everyone, plenty of adventure along with a touching story of family ties. It's top of the list.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Zan-Gah: Great for Adults Too 10 Oct 2007
By John E. Fink - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Zan-Gah is marketed as juvenile literature, but the psychological and human condition themes make it worthy for adult readers as well. For the perceptive, the story is loaded with deep themes that are worthy of discussion. The story reveals that Nature is harshly competetive, and that the human condition, like the lion condition and mouse condition, has parameters defined by survival laws--face reality (the lion) and self-correct (adapt) and you increase chances of survival. This is the path of one twin. The other twin fails to recognize self-correction as the path to growth and fulfillment, and develops an aversion to reality and hatred of the world; he wants utopia. Deep stuff in this very well-written book.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Long ago Adventure. A YA Tale 30 Oct 2010
By TicToc - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
In the land of his people Zan, meant hunter. He is a young man in his early teens, preparing for a hunt that could bring more death to his people. It will be his first hunt, not one for hunger, but to keep their tribe
safe and for revenge of the death of a youngster. Once a lion has tasted of human they would not be safe while it still roamed. He would help to hunt it with his father, his uncle and the rest of the men of his tribe.

The hunt required them to create a large circle around the animal and make is smaller and smaller, thereby trapping the animal in such a way that he was attacked on all sides, more targets to confuse and annoy it. This lion immediately saw a weakness in the line, a line of tall straight unmovable objects but one. There was one weakness in that impenetrable wall. The lion leaped directly at Zan. With no recourse, Zen stood firm holding his
spear steadied by the ground. The lion was impaled, but Zan was marked by his claws. The cry immediately went up.....Zan-Gah, Zan-Gah. He had now just become a man, Zan the rock, immovable as a rock, solid in the face of danger.

As the celebration died down, Zan has made a life changing decision. He, who had been born one of a twin, had lost his brother the prior year. He did not feel that loss in his soul. Because this was so, he knows that his brother is not dead. Originally his family had thought that he too had been killed by one of the great cats, but with no success at finding his body, Zan was now sure he was lost, or taken by one of the many other tribes as a slave. With his newly found manhood, Zan has decided that his task has been set. He will follow the trail of his brother and not return home without him. A time of growth in a young mans life, of making a mark on the world. Will he reach his objective?

This is the story of Zan and his adventures in the prehistoric land of earth, living off the land, learning the customs of the others and searching for his lost twin.

In Zan-Gah, Allan Richard Shickman has given us a glimpse into the earth of long ago. He has described a time and place, rich with imagination, and believable in context. The country is described in detail and the descriptions bring the time to life. We meet different groups of cavemen and learn much of a culture that could have been how life really was on prehistoric earth. The weapons, and skins, as well as the face paintings are described in vivid detail. It is easy to visualize the meeting and fear of the most vicious of the groups.

Zan is a strong young man with a goal that he has set for himself. He will not let anything deter him. He has seen the ways of the world since he was a child and understands the dangers that he will face. He willingly accepts the challenge. He is extremely brave, and well tutored in the intricacies of dealing with others. Because there have been wars between the tribes for as long as could be remembered, there is knowledge of their ways as well.

The story is well told and the descriptions make it easy to visualize the time and place. This is a great book for the young adult reader, but also a fun story for anyone that would be interested in a story of bravery and courage. A story rich in life and adventure.

This book was recieved as a free copy from the publisher. All opinions expressed are my own based of my reading and understanding of the material
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