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A Bone from a Dry Sea

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
On a prehistoric shore, a young girl fights to help her tribe survive
She is at home in the ocean, as comfortable in the water as she is on dry land. The child’s people have made their homes by the bay for as long as anyone can remember, diving for mussels and any other food the ocean will serve to them. They have no language; they have no names. Although they know love and jealousy and pride, they are not quite human—not yet. This child of the sea will show them the way.
Two million years later, Vinny is visiting her father at an archaeological site in Africa when they discover the remains of that forgotten tribe of cliff dwellers. Across the ocean of time, these two young women will find a connection, an inexplicable bond that builds slowly but arrives with all the power of a tidal wave.
This ebook features an illustrated personal history of Peter Dickinson including rare images from the author’s collection.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 1, 1995
      PW's starred review commended the ``gripping'' narrative, in which scientific speculation, a feminist slant and a school of helpful dolphins coalesce in the tales of dual heroines born more than two million years apart. Ages 12-up.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 1, 1993
      In his latest novel, Dickinson tells of two girls whose lives are linked, though they are born more than two million years apart. Along with its dual heroines, this tale has two objectives: one is to entertain, and the other is to elaborate on a controversial theory of evolution. The story's present-day protagonist is Vinny, who is spending the summer on a dig in Africa with her taphonomist father. In the same part of the world but deep in ``our furthest possible past, which is like looking at a group of people far off across a flat, hot plain'' lives Li, a hominid who lives with the rest of her tribe by the shores of a vast sea. The inquisitive Li's knack for inventing new and better ways to do things--along with her rapport with a school of dolphins--makes her the unwilling prize in a struggle between two dominant males. Likewise, in her own time, Vinny becomes the center of a dispute between her father and the dig's arrogant leader. Hefty doses of scientific speculation, a plot rife in coincidence, a school of helpful dolphins, and a decidedly feminist slant are the sort of ingredients that, in less capable hands, could result in a New Age muddle. Here, however, the narrative is gripping, and Dickinson's shrewd observation of the interaction between males and females--in both the present and the past--is easily as compelling as his exploration of the intriguing sea-ape theory. Ages 12-up.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:980
  • Text Difficulty:5-7

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