Drift
William Mayne
‘No food, all lost,’ said the girl. ‘We die ever so soon.’ She sat on the trunk of a fallen tree. ‘No mans here,’ she said. ‘Land of bears, all ever bears.’
Rafe the white boy had been forbidden to play with the ‘heathen’ Indian girl Tawena. But when the two are swept on an ice floe into the heart of the North American wilderness, far from the settlers’ village, only the girl’s Indian skills can preserve them from the awesome danger they face. Can Rafe adopt the Indian expertise he needs to enable them to survive? And why does Tawena disappear when they meet two Indian women?
A compelling novel of survival and of the growing respect between cultures, told by a master storyteller.
‘A tremendous writer.’
Irish Times
Tags
Categorised as:
Faber Children's
Sub-categories:
Children's
Genres & Themes:
Faber Finds;
Adventure;
Wilderness;
Survival
Related Articles:
William Mayne: An Obituary
A Game of Dark
William Mayne
In his masterly survey, Written for Children , John Rowe Townsend describes A Game of Dark as ‘ambitious and harrowing’. His outline can’t be bettered ...
Low Tide
William Mayne
There had never been such a low tide at Jade Bay. It left fish on dry land and a wreck high on a rock, which ...
A Swarm in May
William Mayne, illustrated by C. Walter Hodges
‘I don’t see why I should be Beekeeper, Owen thought, just because Crew is away from school with mumps and I’m the youngest ...
