Rowan and the Zebak
First edition (publ. Omnibus Books)
AuthorEmily Rodda
SeriesRowan of Rin
PublisherOmnibus Books
Publication date
1999
ISBN9781862913035
Preceded byRowan and the Keeper of the Crystal (1998) 
Followed byRowan of the Bukshah (2003) 

Rowan and the Zebak is a 1999 children's fantasy novel by Australian author Emily Rodda. It is the fourth book in the Rowan of Rin series.

Plot summary

Rowan's younger sister, Annad, is snatched from Rin by a flying monster. Rowan must travel to the land of the Zebak – Rin's greatest enemies – in order to rescue her. As she has several times before, the witch Sheba gives a prophecy to guide them on their quest:

Five strange fingers form fate's hand,
Each plays a part at fate's command,
The fiery blaze the answer keeps,
And till its time each secret sleeps,
When pain is truth and truth is pain,
The painted shadows live again,
Five leave but five do not return,
Vain hope in pride and terror burn

The five fingers become Rowan, his Zebak born traveller friend Zeel, Allun the baker, A Maris friend, Perlain, and Sheba through correspondence.

During the journey to Zebak City, Rowan and his companions have their own strengths that allow the four to safely reach the city. Rowan is given a gift by Sheba, that she tell him that he can only open then he's on Zebak land. Sheba turns the fire into green flames, burns Rowan's hand, and summons pain in his arm, only to have something to laugh at. Later, this gift should become handy, as it contained a special metal medallion owned by the people of Rin's ancestors, a bunch of dry branches, that by burning them, would summon the green flames again, show Sheba's face, and tell a new prophecy. And a little bit of grass from Rin, gathered by Sheba, for a grach.

There they discover a thrilling truth, that once long ago their people had been varied, in nature and strength, strong and weak, shy and outgoing. This had been when they were in captivity by the Zebak, but when three hundred years ago, the Zebak captors separated the prisoners, taking the strong people are their warrior slaves, brainwashing them into forgetting family left behind.

The story of what happened to the warriors was known, turning on their Zebak masters the helped the Travelers and the Maris repel them, and eventually settled into what is now Rin, but what happened to those left behind was not. The people left, gentle and timid, with the loss of their people began to decline, so when Rowan and his companions hear this tale there are only three survivors, a grandfather and his grandchildren, Shaaran, gentle like Rowan, and Norris- a throwback to his warrior lineage.

Five leave Rin, but five do not return, because along with bringing Annad home, Rowan and the others also bring the grandchildren to rejoin their people after many centuries apart.

Characters

Reception

Kirkus Reviews called Rowan and the Zebak "solid" and highlighted how "the tale flows smoothly with threatening episodes paced to keep the plot moving". However, they found the novel to be "lacking depth in terms of exploring grand ideas".[1]

Booklist provided a starred review.[2]

References

  1. ^ "Rowan and the Zebak". Kirkus Reviews. 1 May 2002. Archived from the original on 15 September 2021. Retrieved 26 February 2024.
  2. ^ "Rowan and the Zebak". Booklist. 1 March 2002. Archived from the original on 26 February 2024. Retrieved 26 February 2024.