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  • We're back into what will eventually be known  as Graystripe's Adventure with the second  

  • installment: Warrior's Refuge! As with the  last manga installment, I'll be redrawing a  

  • comic page for the drawing in this episode, and  for Warrior's Refuge, that will be this page.  

  • I'm going to say upfront that I *really* like  this book, for different reasons than I would  

  • cite for liking any other book in the series. So  many of the elements in character relationships  

  • and expressions are just too adorable in a way  that really speaks to the species they are.  

  • These aren't just cute kits or a nice familythey're kittens, puppies, and a human family  

  • all learning to get along and love each otherand those particular relationships are much more  

  • viscerally real as a human myself who  has my own cats, who were once kittens,  

  • and who also loves and takes care of dogs. This  might well be the most accurate book in the  

  • series to describe as a cat book, because the fact  that they are cats has never been more relevant.  

  • That said, it is also still part of a story  that includes a couple of well-known and  

  • sometimes-beloved characters, so I'll  try to remember that side of it as well.

  • Warrior's Refuge came out on December 26th of  2007, 8 months after The Lost Warrior and the  

  • same day as Dark River. Considering the mangas  were a very new and different type of material,  

  • and especially considering the  author and illustrator for them,  

  • Dan Jolley and James L. Barry, weren't working on  the main series, it does make sense to me that the  

  • manga sections were given the same deadlines  and release dates as the main series entries.  

  • Like the last manga, this one also begins with  a note from an anonymous Erin Hunter as she  

  • effectively refreshes us on where the last  book left Graystripe off, explains how far he  

  • has to go with the clans being driven from the  forest, and teases an arc about Millie and the  

  • usefulness of her skills as a kittypet, which will  be very interesting to see play out in this book.

  • Warrior's Refuge has a distinct cast of 16  cats, the exact number that The Lost Warrior  

  • had but spread across a different bunch  of characters. However, not everything is  

  • the same between these two entries. Where The  Lost Warrior's top 5 cast had 93% of the lines,  

  • only 85% of the lines are from the topcharacters in Warrior's Refuge. That's still a  

  • lot, but it's a significant decrease. Graystripe  also got less lines here and Millie got more  

  • so there is a slightly more even balance, and  another character manages to hit 50 lines,  

  • so all in all we have a slightly wider  and more stable cast than before,  

  • made mostly of completely new characters. Now  without further ado, onto the story itself.

  • Where we last left off, Millie committed to  journeying with Graystripe to find Thunderclan  

  • again, even after learning about his previous  mate, Silverstream. This time, we open up  

  • with them a short way into their journey, having  located highstones a ways out of the twolegplace.  

  • After crossing a very large Thunderpath, where  Millie froze up and had to be shoved into the  

  • second road, they stop for the night, and  Graystripe considers how lucky he is to have  

  • her with him to realize when he is exhaustedMillie catches her first vole, Graystripe fails  

  • to catch a fish, they lie and watch the stars  while Graystripe tells Millie about Starclan,  

  • and eventually they have to cross another  Thunderpath. Graystripe pulls Millie  

  • physically off of this one, and both of  them end up falling into a corn field,  

  • almost getting hit by a giant monster cutting down  the corn, and getting separated from each other.  

  • Graystripe finds his way to a barn where he is  confronted by a family: Husker, his mate Moss,  

  • her little brother Splash, and Husker and Moss's  kits: Birdy, Pad, Raindrop and Little Mew.  

  • Graystripe pleads for their help and, although  it is dangerous, Husker agrees to help to save  

  • Millie's life, and Splash comes with them. Both  of them are taking the danger very seriously, but  

  • they soon find Millie who, to their display, has  injured her eyes on some of the sharp corn leaves.  

  • Husker reluctantly takes them back instead  of kicking them out immediately and Millie,  

  • with difficulty, manages to climb the ladder  into the loft of the barn where she'll be safe  

  • and can heal. Husker still wants them out by  nightfall but Moss steps in on her behalf,  

  • saying that she wouldn't want anyone to feel as  helpless as they once were. The barn cats finally  

  • introduce themselves after setting Millie down  to rest and explain that they once lived in the  

  • house rather than the barn. However, both of their  elderly owners died, and the new twolegs that came  

  • didn't like them, and brought mean dogs to chase  them away. Graystripe doesn't believe it could  

  • be that bad at first, since Ravenpaw and Barley  get along fine with their twolegs, but the next  

  • morning when he tries to hunt a bird the twoleg  man sprays him with a hose and sends the two dogs  

  • to hunt him down, so he quickly gets the messageMillie and Graystripe talk about how sorry they  

  • feel for the barn cats and their kits, but since  even Graystripe is unable to escape the twolegs  

  • or dogs right now, they're not sure what they can  do. This pessimism doesn't last forever though,  

  • as Millie comes to Graystripe's aid when he's  being chased and orders the dogs, in their own  

  • language, to go away. Adorably, they plead for her  to maybe consider running away, and she says no,  

  • so they just leave. Resulting in another very cute  quote, where Graystripe says he doesn't think he  

  • would be more surprisedif Firestar floated down  from the sky and licked [him] on the nose.” They  

  • return and Graystripe sings Millie's praisesgetting her some serious respect from the barn  

  • cats and leading to Millie teaching all of them  to speak dog enough to order them to run away too.  

  • Even the kits get to try, and they are very cute  about it. Like so cute. Seriously go read this  

  • book for the adorable moments alone. Anyway, the  next time the dogs come to the barn, Splash tells  

  • them to go away and it works, so all of the cats  start relaxing more. Their only remaining concern  

  • is the twolegs, but Millie doesn't know what to  do about a mean twoleg, since she's never met one.  

  • While out hunting, though, they come across one  of the twoleg kits following a frog as they hop  

  • towards a river. Graystripe and Millie get  worried seeing that she's alone, without  

  • the older twolegs, and even more worried as she  gets closer to falling into the river herself.  

  • Graystripe decides to save herby essentially  being a kittypet. He mews and does big puppy  

  • dog eyes and leads her away from the waterThe older twolegs are initially shocked, but  

  • seeing how the cats saved their child, they  are extremely thankful and go to pet them.  

  • Millie accepts the touch, but Graystripe still  isn't comfortable with that and runs away himself.  

  • He knows he belongs in the forest, not in the  barn. Graystripe sees Millie lit by moonlight that  

  • night and goes to comfort her, as the encounter  that day made her miss her own housefolk. But when  

  • pressed, she says she doesn't want to go back. She  wants to be with Graystripe, wherever that is. The  

  • next day, they both encounter the twolegs againwho welcome them and actually scold their older  

  • kit for being mean to them. Seeing how much they  have changed, Graystripe and Millie lead them back  

  • to the barn and introduce them to Husker, MossSplash, and the kits. They get along…*really*  

  • well. It is so sweet. My goodness it is so sweetThe twolegs, Husker's family, and even the dogs  

  • all get along now and are playing together, so  Graystripe and Millie decide they're ready to go.  

  • Before they leave though, one of the older  twolegs stops to thank them and wish them well.  

  • After that, the pair set off once more and almost  immediately timeskip a few days to being drenched  

  • in the rain and in the middle of nowhere. Butit's  not nowhere. Graystripe begins to recognize it,  

  • going forward through the urban twoleg areas with  lots of pipes and cut down trees, longing to find  

  • something from his home, and eventually he finds  it. He finds the Great Sycamore, seemingly the  

  • only tree left in Thunderclan's territory. He is  home. But his home is gone, and so is his clan.

  • So I have a few things to point out here  on the character side. First of all,  

  • Millie continues to be amazing, more so than in  The Lost Warrior even. When she got her eyes cut  

  • on the corn leaves it looked for a short while  like she would turn into a damsel in distress,  

  • but the reality is that her infection cleared up  quickly, and when it did she saved Graystripe,  

  • and all of the barn cats, right back. She is  capable of speaking dog for Starclan's sake,  

  • a very useful fact that I can imagine would  have plenty of utility over in the main series  

  • where she now exists as a permanent part of  Thunderclan. I sure can't wait to see how  

  • they'll apply this amazing skill of hers to more  situations. Additionally, she once again shows  

  • her attachment to her twolegs and yet her care  for Graystripe from the last manga in this one,  

  • as the close encounter here reminded  her of what she was leaving behind.  

  • She's a genuinely strong and likable character  in these mangas. It's really nice to see.

  • Our second main character wasn't half-bad eitherHe still isn't identical to main-series-Graystripe  

  • as we knew him but he's much less grumpy here and  he does have a few careless or, less cynically,  

  • carefree moments where he has to get himself  in trouble to believe in the dangers of his  

  • situation, or where he takes off on a plan he just  came up with without asking anyone else first.  

  • Mostly, though, he's a pretty compassionate and  extroverted cat who gets along with the barn  

  • cats and their kits along with quickly falling  for Millie in a realistic way, based on their  

  • mutual care for each other and each being able to  view the others' strengths. It's quite endearing.

  • Also on the endearing side is Husker's entire  family. Husker and Moss both have a remarkable  

  • about of personality and depth for how few pages  they get in this manga, each protective of each  

  • other and having different but complementary  views on what they can trust from the outside.  

  • Splash falls behind a little in this regard but  he's sweet too, and he does get some really sweet  

  • expressions. That said, Husker and Moss's kits  absolutely steal the show, and both Little Mew and  

  • Birdy deserve special mention for a truly adorable  scene where they're learning to speak dog and  

  • Little Mew doesn't listen to Birdy saying stopcausing Birdy to say he isn't “being a dog right.”  

  • They are so darn cute. This whole book is  so darn cute. Have I mentioned that yet?

  • The twolegs that are much more prevalent in these  early mangas also continue to add tremendously to  

  • the stories they tell. The family that moved into  the farm is, again, remarkably developed. Each  

  • twoleg is very clearly given specific situations  they respond to and levels of anger towards the  

  • cats. And all of them, of course, develop so much  by the end as they see the value in the cats and  

  • commit to accepting them so much that they scold  their child for being mean to one and are sure to  

  • give a compassionate farewell to Graystripe  and Millie when they see the pair leaving.

  • Even the hecking dogs in this book are amazingThey start out as aggressive and mindless as all  

  • Warriors dogs seem to be, but once Millie and  the others start talking to them they get these  

  • darling little faces of confusion and start  showing off other behaviors like pleading,  

  • resignation, and even sarcasm when they've heard  a cat sayno, go awayone too many times. It is  

  • so, *so* darn adorable guys please I'm  begging you go read this, or go read it again.

  • That said, I think it's time I actually discuss  the story. As you might have guessed by how short  

  • the summary was, it's not especially complexEssentially, it's a travel montage followed by a  

  • quick side story about the barn cats' relationship  with the twolegs, and then another quick travel  

  • montage to end us off with a cliffhanger  about the forest and Thunderclan being gone.  

  • If the story is overallGraystripe gets from  the twolegplace to Thunderclan,” then this book  

  • didn't advance that story very much at alland especially didn't spend much actual page  

  • space rather than in-universe time on the  journey. However, that doesn't necessarily  

  • matter. Because there's a second story going  on about Graystripe and Millie's building  

  • relationship and each of their commitments  to each other and hard journey they are on,  

  • and *that* story was developed a lot. Both of  them were given a chance to choose a different,  

  • potentially safer in the end, life, and they  decided against it to keep going on their quest  

  • regardless, while making the world better along  the way rather than just helping themselves.  

  • It also did a fair bit to explore Millie  as a character, an important thing to do  

  • considering she is a new member of our present  Thunderclan's permanent cast, among dozens of  

  • cats that we've known far longer. She shows off  her worth as a cat, a friend, and as a kittypet.

  • Overall, I genuinely love this manga a lot. From  the cute expressions to the surprising depth of  

  • all the new characters in all different species  to the meaning and clarity this story provided  

  • to our main characters in deciding the course of  their journey, it felt like a worthwhile read.  

  • I've been keeping a running favorite books chart  for all of the books I've covered so far in Trip  

  • Through Time, and Warrior's Refuge sits in 4th  place now out of the 17 entries, if you'd like an  

  • idea of how far my love for this book goes. Please  go read it, in the old black and white or the new  

  • colored versions. It's worth your time. And for  my part, we still have one more main series entry  

  • to go through before I can conclude Graystripe's  adventure, so next time I'll dive into Outcast,  

  • a…divisive at best entry in the Power of  Three when I return, to our trip through time.

We're back into what will eventually be known  as Graystripe's Adventure with the second  

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