![]() ![]() As an oddity though, it’s kind of neat the rapid speed you can get through this and crazy number of permutations you can take to an eventual ending. If there’s a sweet spot for these books, where you get enough choices to keep it fun but enough story to keep you interested, this book is far on the extreme away from that. They also weren’t aware of what the Great Wall of China was, so maybe we’re failing as parents to our 5 and 3 year old. Gradually you can make out two passageways. That was a shock to their little ears first that they had a bad ending and second that you could be forced into a life of wall building. You are hiking in Snake Canyon when you find yourself lost in the strange, dimly lit Cave of Time. My kids got to read about a UFO and ended up living a life of forced servitude building the Great Wall of China. Throughout the book if you go to the left you go back in time and go to the right you go forward. My kids decided to stay in the cave and immediately began time traveling. Not surprisingly for a book The Cave of Time staying in the cave results in some time travel shenanigans. Basically, you’re at a cave, and the question is do you stay in the cave until it gets bright out or try to find your way home in the dark. Packard, Edward - The Cave of Time (Choose Your Own Adventure 1). Unlike later choose your own adventure books, this one throws you right in (so much so that my wife and I flipped back to page one multiple times to make sure we didn’t miss anything). We just read it yesterday, in one sitting, and there is a choice on every page. Most of these books I can recite the exact choices my kids picked. ![]()
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