The new Firebird cover for Clan Ground (art by Christian Alzemann, 2006)

Here's what reviewers said about Clan Ground when the book first appeared.
London Times Educational Supplement 14.11.86
Clan Ground. By Clare Bell
Gollancz 7.95 (BP) 575 03888 8
First, a welcome for Clare Bell’s re-newed inventiveness in Clan Ground, the sequel to Ratha’s Creature (reviewed in TES 6.6.86.). On another planet/alternative world, millions of years in the past, intelligent cats (instead of primates) have developed language and a rudimentary society. They realize that they have become different from those cats they call the Un-Named, who have remained animals. In the first instalment of the saga, the feline heroine Ratha discovered how to tame fire, and became leader of the Clan. In the sequel, the author continues to provoke her readers with situations which could have had parallels in mankind’s evolution.
A strange cat comes from outside the Clan, and claims membership because he can speak. He does not, however, directly challenge Ratha’s authority with his superior fighting skills. Instead he takes some fire from the Clan’s communal supplies into a cave, pretending to store it in case of storms. Gradually this fire grows bigger, and becomes the focus of a primitive religion. Cats sneak away from the main camp-fires to dance around and worship the fire in the cave. Ratha, once more driven out from the Clan, must devise a scheme to destroy the fire and her rival.
My speculation that the cats would be limited in their move towards civilization without manipulative skills, has be answered by the introduction of new characters – friendly monkeys who can be trained to help the cats carry fire and perform other tasks. This allegorical fantasy series has much to offer thoughtful teenagers.
Jessica Yates
Read Chapter 1 of Clan Ground in large type
Book Synopsis
(Caution, spoilers ahead!)
Clan
Ground - 1984, re-issued July 2007
As
leader of the Named, Ratha is bothered by the changes that “her creature”
has caused in her people, especially the Firekeeper leader Fessran. It is not easy to deal with the
Red Tongue with only clumsy paws and teeth. To do so requires not only
manipulative skill, but strength and courage. In selecting cubs to train as
Firekeepers,
Fessran emphasizes fierceness and strength, believing that the Red Tongue
demands those qualities.
This
need makes Ratha accept a stranger, Orange-Eyes, into the clan. Though half-dead
from starvation, he braves the savagery of the “fire-dance”, a re-enactment
of the clan’s victory over their enemies. Not realizing how politically astute
the newcomer is, Ratha re-names him Shongshar and gives him to Fessran to be a
Firekeeper.
For
Ratha, the Red Tongue is a domesticated though still powerful “creature”
that can warm and protect the clan. Shongshar, however, sees how fire terrifies
intimidates others. To many in the clan, the Red-Tongue is like a primitive god,
to be feared and worshiped. Shongshar knows he who rules fire rules the Named.
Content with his present life in the clan, he doesn’t challenge Ratha.
Ratha
has decreed that Shongshar can mate within the clan if he promises to let her
inspect his progeny to ensure they have “the light in the eyes” (self-aware
sapient intelligence). If they don’t, she will take the cubs and abandon them.
Thinking that he won’t really care that much about cubs, Shongshar agrees.
However,
when he and Bira, his mate, have the cubs, Shongshar finds that he does love
them. The feared tragedy happens. Bira, knowing that the cubs are non-sentient
animals, abandons the litter. Ratha, finding no “Named light” in the cubs,
must exile and abandon them. With Thakur’s help, she does, although she leaves
the cubs in a place where they might survive. She does not tell Shongshar for
fear he will rescue them.
This
sours Shongshar toward Ratha. He uses his insight about fire to gain power in
the Firekeepers, seducing Fessran into his vision.
During
the clan’s mating season, Thakur, the herding teacher, voluntarily exiles
himself. He is half UnNamed and fears he might sire non-sentient cubs on a clan
female. While Thakur is away from the clan, he tames a lemur-like female
creature. This “treeling” he names “Aree” and the two become
inseparable. Aree is not just a pet. The treeling’s dexterous hands can easily
perform tasks that are nearly impossible for clan-cat paws and teeth.
Realizing
this, Thakur shows Aree to Ratha upon his return. With her support, he trains
Aree how to help a Firekeeper set up and light a fire. He works with the young
Firekeeper Bira. Ratha encourages him because his approach offers a more sane,
effective and gentle way to deal with the Red Tongue.
Fessran
and Shongshar hate the idea. Shongshar, especially, since he knows it challenges
his power. Defying Ratha, the pair set up a fire-temple in a huge cave.
They
build a huge bonfire, stockpile wood and hold savage worship dances around the
flames. They turn the Firekeepers into a tyrannical theocracy, with Shongshar as
“high priest” Fessran becomes a paralyzed figurehead, ensnared by
Shongshar’s powerful will.
Ratha
realizes too late that she can’t eradicate the growing fire-religion. It
appeals to a need in her people. When she outlaws
the fire-temple worship dances, the herders attend in secret, even giving pieces
of meat for the privilege.
Ratha
turns to Thakur and Aree, demonstrating their skill to the Firekeepers. Aree is
pregnant, so that more young treelings can partner with individual Firekeepers.
Their
hopes are dashed when Shongshar’s minions secretly chase the treeling away.
Thakur falls into an angry funk while Shongshar‘s power grows.
Ratha
recovers Aree and restores her to an overjoyed Thakur. Marshalling the herders
to attack the fire-temple, she intends to destroy it. The attempt fails when
some herders, awed by the fire-temple and its guardians, desert to the enemy.
Shongshar
attacks Ratha, intent on killing her. Shocked into reality, Fessran intervenes,
taking Shongshar’s killing strike. This gives Ratha a chance to escape, taking
Thakur and Bira with her. They build an encampment by a mountain stream, just
over the borders of clan ground. Ratha teaches Bira to hunt and Thakur catches
fish. Ratha thinks that Fessran is dead.
Shongshar
extends and intensifies his power, becoming a bloated, oppressive tyrant,
growing fat on meat from the clan herds. Ratha can only watch and seethe.
Ratha,
Bira and Thakur find a very sick and wounded Fessran, who has been dragged out
and left to die. They take her to their refuge, heal her and forgive her. She
regrets her blind foolishness and joins them.
While
Shongshar and the Firekeepers tighten their control over the clan, the outcasts
plot against him. They secretly dig a diversion channel to redirect the stream
flow into a crack in the roof of Shongshar’s fire-temple cave. When they dig
through the final barrier, the rain-swollen torrent pours through the crack and
floods the cave, destroying the fire, drowning some Firekeepers and washing
others out, leaving them drenched and gasping.
Ratha
and her allies find Shongshar, nearly drowned. Despite being nearly dead, he
attacks Ratha, forcing her to kill him.
Regaining
her leadership, Ratha re-unites the divided clan. She once again entrusts the
guidance of the Firekeepers to Fessran, knowing that her friend is now wiser.
Thakur gives young treelings out to Ratha, Bira and others, so that the
Firekeepers can learn a gentler and easier way to manage the Red Tongue. Fessran
says she will take one later, but not just yet.
Ratha
calls her treeling “Ratha’s Aree”, but the name soon gets shortened to
Ratharee. Bira’s companion becomes “Biaree” and this becomes the pattern
for treeling names.
Acknowledging
her people’s need to worship, Ratha adopts less harmful pieces of the
fire-cult. She creates a joyful open-air ring dance around a bonfire and
involving treelings, who leap in a counter-circle atop the feline dancers.
Though
traumatized by the entire episode, Ratha realizes that she has learned and grown
as a leader.