Jeff Stone Tiger: The Five Ancestors

Jeff Stone Tiger: The Five Ancestors

User reviews
3.8

Value For Money

write a review

Jeff Stone Tiger: The Five Ancestors

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here's how it works.

Jeff Stone Tiger: The Five Ancestors
4.83 8 user reviews
563%
413%
30%
20%
10%
3.8

Value For Money

User Reviews

Rex Wakabayashi
5

Value For Money

I Remember Buying This Book With My Son. Although

I remember buying this book with my son. Although I'm a little short in fund that day, brought this book for him 'cause he wouldn't let go of it inside the bookstore.

To my surprise it is a really good read, not just for kids but for adults as well.

Highly recommended.

- Rex Wakabayashi

Guest
3

Value For Money

Jeff Stone Tiger: The Five Ancestors Is So Awesome

Jeff Stone Tiger: The Five Ancestors is so awesome because the author really knows how to bring out the story and showcase it in a neat way...

Guest

Jeff Stone Tiger: The Five Ancestors Is A Realisti

Jeff Stone Tiger: The Five Ancestors is a realistic kung fu fighting, for every age, you learn a lot about chinese history and tradition, its just fun to read it !!!!! =) One of the best books i ever read!!!!!!!!

Guest
3

Value For Money

Jeff Stone Tiger: The Five Ancestors Series Is Gre

Jeff Stone Tiger: The Five Ancestors series is great, the storyline and plot are so addictive that it's hard to stop reading. However, Jeff Stone's use of language somewhat brings it down and could use a serious language makeover. Great plot, these kind of books are just so addictive.

Guest
4

Value For Money

The Book Was Full Of Action And Vital Images That

The book was full of action and vital images that flies through your head. The story was great! with all that expression and action, the book's a nondropper!

Guest
4

Value For Money

It Was An Over All Great Book That Keeps You In It

It was an over all great book that keeps you in it the whole way through. it contained drama action mystery and suspense. i recomend the five ancestors series

Guest
4

Value For Money

Wow! Maybe The Best Book I 've Read This Year, You

wow! maybe the best book I 've read this year, you cant stop reading it, and the plot is very exiting, jeff stone has done a master job with the writing style and the secrets and action scenes are abundant. The dialogue is a bit poor, but I recommend it for people who wants to make a present for a kid, or specially to people of any year who likes manga videogames or the best of all, martial arts!!!

Molly Martin
4

Value For Money

Molly's Reviews Title: Tiger: The Five

Molly's Reviews

Title: Tiger: The Five Ancestors

Fast Paced Read .. Recommended

The Review

The narrative opens in Henan Province where the reader finds twelve year old Fu, Tiger, mumbling from the bottom of a terra-cotta barrel. Lying on top of him are his temple brothers Malao, She, Hok and Long. It is China in the year of the Tiger, 1650 AD. The five orphans raised from infancy in the secret temdple have been hidden by the Grandmaster. The temple is their home; the warrior monks are their family. Enemy horses are racing up and down, weapons clash. Screams fill the air as warrior monks are toppled. Leading the attack carried out by the emperor's army is sixteen year old Ying, the Eagle, the renegade brother who earlier learned his own fighting skill along side the five youngsters. Ying is determined to destroy the Cangzhen Monastery, murder the Grandmaster and steal the sacred scrolls. The Cangzhen temple is reduced to a fiery ruin, stolen library scrolls are retrieved and, Fu receives an offer to join Ying. A terrifying new weapon, a tiger pit, a motherless tiger cub, a garbage heap all figure in the narrative. Fu whose fighting style is patterned after the Tiger for whom he is named is captured and kept in a cart before he is freed in an unexpected manner. Fu and his brothers are the only survivors of the attack. When the five brothers are reunited each has a story to tell and they realize their bond is as strong as it might be if they were actually brothers by birth.

Adopted in infancy, writer Stone draws upon his understanding of martial arts and his awareness for the yearning an adopted child may harbor for knowing of his birth parents to craft an engaging look into an ancient account. The narrative of five warrior monks who managed to elude the seventeenth century devastation of China's renowned Shaolin Temple is told through the words and actions of five young boys each of whom is named for an animal whose fighting skill they emulate.

Tiger is the first in 'The Ancestors' series wherein five young warrior monks will learn to deal with the calamity of losing the only home and family they have known coupled with their search into their hidden pasts. Tiger is not for the finicky. Ying is a fear-inspiring scoundrel; fierce battles are depicted in intense detail in this narrative filled with savagery, conspiracy, artifice and intrigue. Well fleshed characters are portrayed in kid pleasing fashion in this fast paced adventure. Fu's impetuous 'act before thinking' nature is something with which youngsters in the target audience of upper middle grades into high school can readily identify. Tart dialogue between the various players is believable plus it serves to move the tale along at a steady clip.

Forceful motivations, story line twists, perplexity all flow from the pen of writer Stone in this fast paced debut anecdote of treachery, betrayal and intrigue.

Enjoyed the read, happy to recommend for the home pleasure library, the classroom bookshelf and the homeschool venue. Tiger will no doubt draw boys especially toward the series.

Reviewed by: molly martin

Genre: Juvenile ages 10 and older

Author: Jeff Stone

ISBN: 0 375 83071 5

1
itshimthere

Best book 4evr hehehhe LMAO

1 - 8 of 8 items displayed
1

Q&A

There are no questions yet.