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Hardcover The Dark Ground Book

ISBN: 0525473505

ISBN13: 9780525473503

The Dark Ground

(Part of the The Dark Ground Trilogy (#1) Series, The Lost Series, and The Lost Trilogy Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

$4.79
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List Price $15.99
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Book Overview

Robert wakes up naked and alone in a thick jungle. The last thing he remembers is being in a plane with his family, but there is no sign of a crash or survivors. Then he discovers the shocking truth--he is in the park near his house, but his familiar world has been transformed into an alien landscape. When he finds others in the same position, he enlists their help in getting back home. But the journey is more perilous than Robert could ever imagine...

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

the past

This is a book /thriller that always kept me on my seat the whole book. The perfect description of background and character. The description was so good I could picture it all in my mind! Read it!

Spoilers aplenty! Spoilers galore! So many spoilers you're bound to be sore!

First of all, I want to say that due to the way "The Dark Ground" was written, it's almost impossible to write a review of it without giving away those major mysterious plot points that are slowly revealed by the author throughout the reading of the text. Therefore, I must be a good little reviewer and warn you right here and now that my review contains many many spoilers about this book. If you want to read this wonderfully mysterious and atmospheric tale with any sense of wonder, stop reading this review once this paragraph ends. I'll sum up the important information right here for your convenience: This is a fun first book in a series. It's fast-paced, full of action, and a bit gory for younger kids. You'll enjoy finding out what happens to its hero and the ending leaves you wanting more. There! Now go away unless you want to be completely clued into some of the deeper innerworkings of this marvelous British import. It's just your typical airplane ride. One minute Robert's in the bathroom of a plane, looking in the mirror, and seeing a tiny man in the black part of his iris. The next, he's naked and alone in a huge forest with no sense of where he is and no one he knows near him. Using his wits Robert must fend for himself, finding food, makeshift clothing, and a shelter of some sort. As he grows better acquainted with his surroundings, the boy realizes that there are other people living near him and he must do everything he can to get their attention and find out what exactly has happened to him. In many ways this book is just a slightly more fantastical version of Gary Paulsen's, "Hatchet". The sense of survival against a cruel world (not to mention the gigantic hungry creatures within it) and sense of one man against the universe is prevalent throughout the text. What really pulls the story together though is Cross's ability to convey the horrific and the impossible in a believable way. Robert realizes what's happened to him only after confronting the facts and realizing that, however impossible they may seem, they must be true. You see, Robert has been shrunken. He's tiny. So are the other people he meets. So when he sets off for his old home to recover his old life, the trek is long and arduous. The book's like "The Borrowers" but much darker. What's really amazing about Cross's writing is that she manages to make an essentially silly idea (boy-gets-shrunk) into something frightening and disturbing. Of course there are some problems. For one thing, Cross is a great writer but she is simply awful at humor. There's really not a single funny line or lighthearted jab anywhere to be found in this tome. Robert's in a serious situation and it remains serious continually. This can be a bit wearying after 200 pages or so. There's also a lot of howling, pain, and people confronting big ideas and not being able to reconcile themselves to them. These characters are constantly shying away from painful thoughts. It g

Size Does Matter!

Robert Doherty has been whisked out of his comfortable modern world and thrown into a dark and vicious wilderness where he must find a way to survive. In veteran author Gillian Cross's newest book, she proves again why she is one of the most popular children's authors in Britain. With deft storytelling and an atmospheric writing style, she takes a familiar plot element and transforms it into something new again. While Ms. Cross is not yet as well known in the US, I am hoping The Dark Ground can begin to change that. What readers will encounter here is a mix between a fantasy and a survivor story. Robert is a teen traveling with his family by plane when something happens to him that he can't comprehend or quite remember-and he finds himself cold and naked in a dark and forbidding forest. What happened and how aren't quite as important as staying alive-and it's only when he discovers other people living in this strange forest that he begins to consider how to get back home. But getting back home won't be so easy-because Robert's home is both closer than he dreamed and farther away than he could have imagined. It's going to take all his strength and bravery, along with the help of his newfound friends to undertake the expedition. The fantasy element of the book is not inherently magical. Beyond the situation Robert finds himself in, there is no magic or magical way out of his predicament. The characters are left to figure their own way out. Ms. Cross writes a riveting book, full of action, emotion and imagery that roars into the mind and sweeps the reader up into the experiences of the characters. But Ms. Cross does not write an easy book-this is not a tale of whimsy and Harry Potter-esque characters. Every individual is realistic, complex, sometimes unlikable and ultimately human. The world Robert faces is unforgiving and yet remarkable-and death comes all too easily. Ms. Cross doesn't give readers easy answers or a pat ending, nor does she tease readers by making them wait for the second volume in the trilogy to have some kind of closure to this first adventure. This book is best for children who are ready to deal with some of the tougher issues of adventure, and can handle endings that are thought provoking if not a hundred percent "happy". While still a young teen title, I do think both young adults and adults can enjoy this story as well. Ms. Cross never talks down to her audience, but offers universal perspectives and emotions that almost any individual can relate to. Those who have read and enjoyed this book and want more survivor style fiction should check out Island of the Blue Dolphins by Scott O'Dell and Hatchet by Gary Paulsen. Likewise, those who are fans of Science Fiction may want to look for titles such as The City of Ember by Jeanne Duprau or Obernewtyn by Isobelle Carmody. The Dark Ground is only the first in this trilogy, I can only hope the other two books can live up to the promise of this first one. Happy
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