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''Rowan and the Travelers'' is the sequel to ''Rowan of Rin'', and the second book in the ''Rowan of Rin'' series written by Emily Rodda and published in 1994. It picks up where the first one ended, and tells the story of then the Travelers, a tribe that may carry a dangerous sickness mysteriously comes and goes from Rin, where Rowan, a shy and weak, but strong minded boy lives, a dangerous sleeping sickness appears. The sickness comes from a fruit brought down from the Mountain (by one Rowan's own companions, Allun the baker) next to Rin, the town's river and the Bukshahs's field. The And on the Mountain, a dangerous dragon is said to dwell, which Rowan met on his first big journey. == Plot == The book picks up where the first one, ''Rowan of Rin (novel)'', ended. ''Rowan and the Travelers'' tells the story about how the tribe of the Travelers mysteriously showed up in the town of Rin. After their even more mysterious departure, a sleeping sickness appears in Rin and the Travellers are suspected of causing it. Rowan and Allun go to find the Travellers and ask them to stop the sickness. They find the Travellers heading to the horrific Pit of Unrin. Here they find out that the sickness originally descends from a dangerous kind of fruit called Mountain-berries brought down from the Mountain next to Rin. Its scent lulls people into a deep and heavy sleep. It turns out that the berries are the smaller and infantile form of big trees growing beneath the Mountain itself. Rowan, Allun and the Travellers must save the town with the help of a potion Sheba made of slip-daisy roots. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Rowan and the Travellers」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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