![]() ![]() Still, Whelan's formidable and appealing heroine will keep readers rooting for her dream of a home with the lions of Africa. However, when the villains are exposed, much of the novel's tension dissipates and the balance of the book reads somewhat like an extended epilogue. Listening for Lions by Gloria Whelan 4.5 (24) Paperback (REPRINT) 7.99 View All Available Formats & Editions Paperback 7.99 eBook 7.99 Paperback (REPRINT) 7. Once in England, the girl's evolving relationship with the invalid grandfather heightens her sense of guilt about her assumed identity. Gloria Whelan is the best selling author of many novels for young readers, including Homeless Bird, winner of the National Book Award Fruitlands: Louisa May. The author ensures that Rachel's lack of choices and her sensitive nature make her complicity wholly believable. ![]() What sets this familiar tale apart is Rachel's love of the African land, animals and Masai people, and the details that make Whelan's narrative come alive. I think I believed that because Father was a doctor, he would let no illness come to our family." When 13 year-old Rachel Sheridan loses her British missionary parents, unscrupulous neighbors exploit her resemblance to their deceased daughter, Valerie, and send her to England to try to collect the inheritance from Valerie's ailing grandfather. "It didn't occur to me at that moment that I, too, might become an orphan. ) places her courageous and thoughtful narrator in Africa in 1919, just after the Great War and manages to place a new twist on familiar themes. ![]()
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