Taronga

Taronga

  • Submitted By: labels
  • Date Submitted: 03/10/2009 4:18 AM
  • Category: Book Reports
  • Words: 435
  • Page: 2
  • Views: 441

ter betraying the animals, Ben decided and swore never to Call to them again. He and Ellie together are going to free themselves from the Last Days and live peacefully, looking towards their better future, not back on the unhappy days of the recent past.
In a short period of time, a long list of events occurred; some of them, although it didn’t seem like that at the time, for the better and other events very unfortunate. The story began not at the start of Last days but during Ben’s journey while he was captive of an older man, Greg, as they were fleeing from Last Days.
This levels the guesswork to the reader, to use imagination and understand Calling. Of course, this involves the reader and intrigues them to continue reading. Victor Kelleher, the author of Taronga, does this again in using Last Days, frequently speaking of it but not explaining throughout the novel what it is
After hiding in a boat for some days, Ben needed some water, but as he was going down to the overgrown grass the men from the bridge incidents caught him. They needed Ben as a decoy to break into Taronga Zoo. The men from the bridge were Trev and the leader of his large guerrilla group, Chas.

ter betraying the animals, Ben decided and swore never to Call to them again. He and Ellie together are going to free themselves from the Last Days and live peacefully, looking towards their better future, not back on the unhappy days of the recent past.
In a short period of time, a long list of events occurred; some of them, although it didn’t seem like that at the time, for the better and other events very unfortunate. The story began not at the start of Last days but during Ben’s journey while he was captive of an older man, Greg, as they were fleeing from Last Days.
This levels the guesswork to the reader, to use imagination and understand Calling. Of course, this involves the reader and intrigues them to continue reading. Victor Kelleher, the author of Taronga, does this again in...