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Short Summary "The Mammoth and the Ice Age"
The introduction evokes a world still echoing with deep winter, where frost on windows and smoky breath remind us of that Earth once wore a heavier crown of ice. In that austere beauty, legends say the aurora whispers, the wind instructs, and friendship can arrive wearing woolly coats and crescent tusks. This is the frame for a story about an unlikely bond.
In the Pleistocene, a small human camp watches skies for migrating herds and the river for the first glassy skim of ice. Among them is Suri, seventeen, a tracker with keen hearing and a steadfast heart. Her people sing of mammoths-giants whose memories run like rivers and whose steps inscribe meaning on snow. Those songs are living maps, and Suri reads them because survival depends on turning music into directions.
One winter sharpens to a cutting edge: glaciers advance like slow thunderheads and storms rehearse their temper over the plain. Elders name the shift a turning of ages; hunters cinch belts and double-knot laces. To remember courage, Suri ties a blue ribbon-glacier-colored-around her wrist, a small vow that flutters whenever the wind asks tough questions. The book promises to trace what follows when a human life braids with a mammoth's: a season when kindness becomes a survival skill, and a people learn to bend without breaking as the ground itself changes its mind. Suri will follow a river that sings through ice and meet a wounded giant with a willing heart; a wary herd will make room for an improbable ally; wolves will do hunger's arithmetic; fire will be taught to behave like a wall.
This world offers goat paths and mineral springs, the grammar of storms and the promises tied into ribbons. Bone markers speak after weather thins them. There is the sound of tusks lifting a ledge on the count of three, and the hush that follows a difficult choice made well. Before new snow erases the page, two sets of footprints-one small, one wide-gleam in blue light, proof that bravery leaves a trace even when the road tries to hide it.
Benefits of reading story book
Reading promotes curiosity, attentiveness, and empathy. Children and adults become smarter when they explore ideas, develop knowledge, and learn languages. Stories demonstrate choices and consequences, explaining how to behave in various situations. Regular reading also improves memory, reduces stress, and develops imagination, creativity, and critical thinking abilities.
Best Wishes,
Thank you for purchasing and gifting our book for birthdays, Christmas, and other special occasions. Your daily encouragement and enthusiasm for storytelling inspires us. We are thrilled to be a part of your special moments, and we hope our story brings you happiness and magic. Thank you again for sharing our wonderful adventure!
Thank You.
Book Description:
Total Pages: 113
Book Size: 6" × 9" - Inches
Cover: Soft, Glossy
Interior book: Color Pages.
Suitable ages: 12-18+
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