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High Rhulain (Redwall)

High Rhulain (Redwall)
By Brian Jacques

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Product Description

The otters of Green Isle have long been enslaved to the Wildcat Riggu Felis. They work and wait for the day their savior will arrive—the prophesized High Rhulain, who will lead them in battle and a return to glory. Meanwhile, young Tiria Wildlough, an ottermaid at Redwall Abbey, pines for her chance to learn the ways of the warrior, much against the wishes of her father. So when an injured osprey arrives at the Abbey, seeking help for its wounds and carrying tales of an embattled clan of otters, young Tiria knows what she must do.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #81467 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-03-13
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 352 pages

Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal
Grade 6 Up–The Redwall saga continues with a book that can stand entirely on its own. Tiria is a young ottermaid with amazing skill with rock and sling. She lives in Redwall with her father and the entire cast of beloved characters from earlier novels. When she starts to dream of a place called Green Isle and Martin the Warrior, she realizes that she is destined to go on a quest and follow in the steps of the High Rhulain, an otter queen. The book alternates between Tiria's adventures, her friends working on word puzzles back home to help her, and the hardships of the otters who live on Green Isle where they are slaves to a group of cats. Jacques combines action, poetry, songs, courage, and vivid descriptions to create a unique style. His characterizations are complex and show multiple sides of both adult and younger personalities. The pacing is well handled, especially in a book with three story lines that entwine. As with the other volumes, there is sacrifice, death, and bloody battles galore. Readers familiar with the series will relish returning to the Abbey. Those new to the Redwall universe will be looking for the previous titles to learn more about Martin the Warrior and Salamandastron.–Tasha Saecker, Caestecker Public Library, Green Lake, WI
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
Gr. 5-8. In this eighteenth installment of the Redwall series, Jacques chronicles the saga of ottermaid Tiria Wildlough, who, following dream visions from Martin the Warrior and an otter kinswoman, sets off for the Green Isle to rescue some otters enslaved by wildcat chieftain Riggu Felis, and take her rightful position as High Rhulain. Armed with a slingshot, and with assistance from a goose, an osprey, and Salamandastron's Long Patrol hares, Tiria journeys through Mossflower and across the Great Western Sea to do battle with the vicious cats. As always, Jacques adds to the intrigue with several subplots boiling just beneath the surface--including infighting among Riggu Felis and his dysfunctional family, and anagrams and riddles that must be solved to complete Tiria's story and uncover a missing lance and coronet. Elliot's detailed line drawings will help readers visualize the novel's many characters. A welcome book for series fans. Kay Weisman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
Brian Jacques lives in Liverpool, England. David Elliot lives in New Zealand.


Customer Reviews

Brian Jacques returns back to Redwall basics!4
With High Rhulain (the eighteenth installment of the famed Redwall series) now released, Brian Jacques reasserts his powerful writing ability in a truly fantastic manner. In this adventure, the readers are introduced to Tiria, a young otter-maid who excels at her skill with a rock and sling. Tiria lives at the famed Redwall Abbey in Mossflower Wood with her father and lots of other peaceful forest creatures. After rescuing a large osprey from the clutches of an evil rat gang outside the Abbey, she begins to learn of the existence of Green Isle, a far away island where otters related to her are enslaved by barbarous wildcats. Slowly through riddles, puzzles, and strange dreams, Tiria learns that she is the lost queen (or Rhulain) of the oppressed otters at Green Isle. Together with the help of Pandion the osprey, Captain Frunk W. Bloodpaw the pirate, and thirty fighting-hares from Salamandastron; she sets out on a quest to free her fellow otters, defeat the vicious wildcat warlord Riggu Felis, and reclaim her rightful position as Rhulain of Green Isle.

After finishing the last few pages of this novel and closing the book, only one conclusion could have been drawn about High Rhulain; this manuscript is another masterpiece in Mr. Jacques' vast collection. The book is geared towards the 6+ grade category and it captures the attention of its age group very early in the story. As with all of Jacques' books before, High Rhulain is filled to the brim with courage, singing, laughter, bloody battles, and many puzzles. The mood was delightfully edgy at some points in the story, and totally uplifting in others. Theme throughout the story consisted of bravery and how one person (or creature) can change the outcome of an entire civilization. Once again, the time and setting take place at the historic Redwall Abbey, but readers are also introduced to the exotic island of Green Isle.

Having just focused on some of the few grammatical delights of this book, the review will now center on the novel itself. The story far surpassed any of the author's previous attempts at folklore. Perhaps what was most enjoyable would have to be the way Mr. Jacques balanced the act of illustrating three separate adventures simultaneously while not losing a single beat in any instance. The story would constantly oscillate between Tiria's journey to Green Isle, her friends' attempts to solve mysterious riddles back at Redwall Abbey, and the events happening at faraway Green Isle. These separate plots would be distinctly different from each-other for a majority of the story, until they were finally tied together at the climax of the novel.

Contained within this book is something for everyone to identify with. If the reader is a compassionate, good-always-triumphs-over-evil type of person, then they'll probably identify with Tiria and all her Redwall friends. But if the person reading this story is a little wild, a bit humorous, and infinitely hungry; then that person will definitely feel a connection with any hare featured throughout this story. It is rare nowadays that an author can make a hero truly likeable and the villain so totally despicable, but Mr. Jacques' accomplishes this task with relative ease. All in all however, High Rhulain is certainly not the best of the Redwall series; but it proves to readers that many adventures still exist within Mossflower Wood.

Great Book5
The High Ruhlain is about an otter maids adventure and all the friends she makes along the journey. Also, a large Abbey named Redwall, an evil cat lord, and a place called Green isle Take a large part of the story.

This amazing book is about a otter maid named Tiria Wildough, who has a dream-vision. In this dream, Martin The Warrior, spirit of Redwall, her home, and a tall otter queen who sort of looks like an older Tiria give the otter a riddle to solve. Later, When she and her friends crack the riddle, they discover that Tiria is descended from the queen in her dream, and Tiria was the rightful ruler of Green isle, where the tyrannical cat lord Riggu Felis has enslaved most of the old otter population, except for a small band of rebels hiding from him.The riddle also said that Tiria was the one to save the otters.

On her journey, she meets the Guosim (Gorilla Union Of Shrews In Mossflower), a mad rabbit, named Cuthbert Frunk W. Bloodpaw, a badger lord, by the name of Mandoral high-peak, the lord's rabbit army, the Long Patrol, and a lot of other guys who it would take too long to name. Well, Tiria, Cuthpert, a couple of long potrol squads, and two birds named Pandion and Brantilis set sail on the last leg of the journey to Green isle.once there, a large battle takes place between trained Rabbits from the long patrol and newly enthusiastic rebel otters against the guard of Riggu Felis who, by the way, is killed in this battle a little bit before the rest of the cat army wemt down. But in the process of destroying the cat lord's evil rule, two good friends are left to be greived.

I love this book. Some of my favorite parts are the riddles. for example;
"Linger sure for the lee, I set my trick carefully,
My home lies o'er the sea you'll find the title names me... is"
very confusing. I also like howJacquesgoes from talking about Tiria, to Redwall, to the enemy H.Q. He really makes you want the good guys to win.

If you like puzzles, dramatic, discriptive books, than this is a must-read. This is Jacques's Master piece.you know the whole time that the good guys will win, but he keeps it realistic at the same time. a true work of art.

Recommended for fantasy readers in middle school, high school and beyond5
Young Tiria Wildlough is an ottermaid touched with destiny: she journeys from Redwall Abbey to an isle where she must fulfill an ancient prophecy to gain her inheritance, and face a wildcat chieftain and his catguard slave masters. Her involvement in an otterclan battle will change her world in this latest Redwall saga for fantasy readers in middle school, high school and beyond.