The Well of Sacrifice is one of very few novels set in the Mayan empire. It's about a girl who lives in a large Mayan city at the height of Mayan civilization. We know today, from archaeological excavations and studies, that the great Mayan cities were suddenly abandoned and fell into ruin sometime around the ninth century. But Eveningstar Macaw, the fictional Mayan girl who narrates this novel, doesn't know her city is on the verge of disaster.
The novel offers a thorough, well-researched look at almost every aspect of Mayan culture. Scenes illustrate Mayan storytelling, celebrations, ball games, sacrificial practices, the Maya calendar system, women's work like grinding corn, weaving cloth and gathering medicinal herbs, and more. Because of this, much of the first third of this novel may move too slowly for some readers. The rest of the novel is consistently exciting and suspenseful, though, as Eveningstar and her family rise in importance and a jealous high priest uses his power to threaten them.
Eveningstar, eleven at the beginning of the novel and fourteen at the end, is an intelligent, courageous girl. Readers can identify with her, even though many of her people's customs seem extremely strange by modern standards. The novel includes some brief scenes of gruesome sacrifices and bloodletting practices, but these are depicted in a way that helps readers understand their meaning to the Mayan people without dwelling at length on their gory nature. The black-and-white illustrations by Bryn Barnard are so beautiful that some readers will be tempted to skim through The Well of Sacrifice and look at them all before settling down to read. (1999; 236 pages)