

George builds the suspense in a third-person narration that most often takes the falcon's perspective, as Frightful hesitates between returning to Sam (who can no longer harbor her) and following the instincts of her breed as a male attempts to court her. Once Alice, Sam's sister, frees the falcon, much of the tension in the novel relates to whether or not Frightful can make it on her own. searching for the one mountain, the one tree, and Sam""). The falcon thinks only of returning to Sam, in a riff that recurs throughout the novel (""She was. As the novel opens, Frightful, Sam Gribley's peregrine falcon, is being held captive by poachers. Like the conclusion of George's Julie of the Wolves trilogy (Julie's Wolf Pack), this third book in the cycle that began with My Side of the Mountain is told almost exclusively from the point of view of the wildlife.
