Bajie is a sensitive and caring child, Bajie longs for his father's love, but his father's grudges and Urietu's silence make Bajie want to run away. It is only when his generous "brother" Maoli Duga appears that Bajie opens up to him, but it is a conspiracy about the yellow horn.
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The novel takes the "Yellow Sheep Horn" as a clue, describing the lives of three generations of unrelated grassland people and their deep feelings. Husleng, a young herdsman, reneges on his word with Utu, an old hunter, in order to get the yellow sheep's horn, which ultimately leads to Utu's serious injury.
When Husleng was dying, he entrusted his child, Bajie, to the celibate Utu and returned the horn. Utu was cold and silent in appearance, but had a fiery heart and cared for Bajie like a relative.
Bajie was compelled by the bad youths of Sumu to make a big mistake and make up for it by stealing the yellow ram's horn, which went missing. Utu's life is in danger, Bajie is determined to find the missing yellow horn, the biggest wish of the heart.
What he didn't realize was that the horn had already returned to Utu. In the years since the incident, Uttu has never revealed a word about it, and his generosity has finally touched Bajie's heart. In the end, Ba Jie buried the yellow goat horn with Utu under that magical grassland. This novel is more warm and valuable to the emotional care between people, and has a more profound understanding of nature.