It may be that I have lower standards after reading "Three Cups of Tea", but this book is great. The writing is wonderful, though there were a couple small parts where it got a bit boring. However, the amazing thing is the character development. I felt so strongly for the main character that it's just kind of...wierd.
The book is about a Spainish boy who was sent to seminary until he was 16, but instead became a shepard so he could travel. He develops a crush on the daughter of a merchant he sells wool to. During his travels, he has the same dream twice: He is sheparding, as he always does, when a child begins playing with his sheep. Soon, the scene changes to the Egyptian Pyramids, where the child says to go there in order to find his treasure. He goes to a gypsie to hav the dream interpreted, and when he tells her, she simply says to give her one tenth of the treasure when he finds it.
I'll leave the rest out. The only annoying thing about this book is that it isn't devided into chapters. After the first, say, 50 pages, there's the end of part one. Other than that, it's an excellent book.
Oh, and I garuntee you'll start crying when you read the last line of part one.
Gender:
Points: 1176
Reviews: 56