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A dark
skin caveboy’s world collapses when his fair skin brother is expelled from
the tribe. Will they ever complete their rite of passage, the Hunter’s Walk?
Will they ever find its true meaning?
The
Hunter’s Walk is a stereotype busting prehistorical fictional novel about an
artistic inventive caveboy’s struggle to overcome discrimination and ice age
climate change.
Ghar, a dark skin caveboy, is trying to stop the discrimination against his
fair skin brother, and the fair skins of the tribe.But then Das, a tribal
elder expels the fair skins and later Ghar himself. With the help of Mai, a
healer from a wolf tribe, he defeats his old tribe uniting the dark and fair
skins, allowing them to complete the Hunter’s Walk (A rite of passage only
meant for dark skins).
At the end of the Hunter’s Walk they end up at a massive rock face that has
been carved into four faces, the Fathers of Zarda. The descriptions are
supposed to lead the reader to believe this is Mount Rushmore (not 50,000
years in our past, but 50,000 years in our future. Not central Asia, but
South Dakota.)
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A dark
skin caveboy’s world collapses when his fair skin brother is expelled from
the tribe. Will they ever complete their rite of passage, the Hunter’s Walk?
Will they ever find its true meaning?
The
Hunter’s Walk is a stereotype busting prehistorical fictional novel about an
artistic inventive caveboy’s struggle to overcome discrimination and ice age
climate change.
Ghar, a dark skin caveboy, is trying to stop the discrimination against his
fair skin brother, and the fair skins of the tribe.But then Das, a tribal
elder expels the fair skins and later Ghar himself. With the help of Mai, a
healer from a wolf tribe, he defeats his old tribe uniting the dark and fair
skins, allowing them to complete the Hunter’s Walk (A rite of passage only
meant for dark skins).
At the end of the Hunter’s Walk they end up at a massive rock face that has
been carved into four faces, the Fathers of Zarda. The descriptions are
supposed to lead the reader to believe this is Mount Rushmore (not 50,000
years in our past, but 50,000 years in our future. Not central Asia, but
South Dakota.)