book data
6546 ratings, 3.95 average rating, 656 reviews
(more data...)
edit
published
September 1st 1981
(first published 1980)
by Bantam
binding
Mass Market Paperback, 495 pages
isbn
0553250426
(isbn13: 9780553250428)
description
When her parents are killed by an earthquake, 5-year-old Ayla wanders through the forest completely alone. Cold, hungry, and badly injured by a cave l...more
Sign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
| topics | replies | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Rory Gilmore ...: Any Devotees of Historical Fiction (And should I convert!?) | 62 | 445 | 5 days ago, 05:17PM | |
| How To Put This? | 14 | 77 | 31 days ago, 08:29PM |
friend reviews
To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
This book is currently not featured on any Listopia lists.
Add this book to your favorite list »
other reviews (showing 1-20 of 7562)
All ratings
|
5 stars (2277)
|
4 stars (2292)
|
3 stars (1436)
|
2 stars (374)
|
1 star (155)
|
avg 3.95
Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
shallow spiritualists harboring secret fantasies of miscegnation
I *really* wanted to dig this book. I have a burgeoning obsession with prehistory, evolution, and the antecedents of man, and a tale of Cro Magnons and Neanderthals is exactly what I'd love to read.
Sadly, this book does not contain that tale.
Instead, it's a goopy mess of inane metaphysics, prurience for prurience's sake, and a none-too-subtle dollop of racism, as the blonde-haired and light-skinned heroine shows the more primitive (and darker-skinned) Neanderthals how to do--well, just a...more
Sadly, this book does not contain that tale.
Instead, it's a goopy mess of inane metaphysics, prurience for prurience's sake, and a none-too-subtle dollop of racism, as the blonde-haired and light-skinned heroine shows the more primitive (and darker-skinned) Neanderthals how to do--well, just a...more
Like this review?
yes
(8 people liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
fantasy,
thoughts-and-studies
The thing that strikes me most about her work is that every time there's a new discovery about how paleolithic people lived, it goes along with her stories. Things they said were silly back when she wrote it- Neanderthals with instruments, Neanderthals living with homo sapiens sapiens, and the like- proving true.
She gives interesting ideas of thought and culture and how societies develop. The first two books are her best I think. The rest remain interesting if you can deal with the cons...more
She gives interesting ideas of thought and culture and how societies develop. The first two books are her best I think. The rest remain interesting if you can deal with the cons...more
Like this review?
yes
(4 people liked it)
1 comment
Read in January, 1997
So, I read this book in high school, and it was SO GOOD. It's about this little girl (Ayla) who is left orphaned and alone during prehistoric times, then picked up and raised by Neanderthals. They think she's ugly and weird, but in reality she is a stunningly beautiful, tall blonde leggy woman. She just is living with a bunch of under-evolved people who don't see it. (I think I loved this book because I imagined it was the same way in my life. I am way hotter than people give me credit for, prob...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
2 comments
bookshelves:
topshelf
Read in October, 2002
recommends it for:
Everyone!
This book and the series that follows is endearing, troublesome, and whole-heartedly compassionate. This is the book my grandmother read to me as a little girl during the middle of a tornado, while we waited out the storm by candlelight. This is the book that started me reading... really reading.
I learned that I can love my quiet time, and apparently I love stories on the ancient human race... our beginnings. The ways of survival, ways of development, natural medicine, culture and anthropolog...more
I learned that I can love my quiet time, and apparently I love stories on the ancient human race... our beginnings. The ways of survival, ways of development, natural medicine, culture and anthropolog...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
fiction,
survival
recommends it for: my enemies
Read in November, 2007
recommended to Blast by:
It was on a list of "must read survival books"recommends it for: my enemies
This book was recommended to me as a good resource for learning primative skills. I'd have to strongly disagree with that. There were a few medicinal plants mentioned but you have to slog through hundreds of pages of lame story-telling to find them. The book gave a very idealized veiw of the lives of cavemen. Everything was milk and honey and wonderful rather than brutish, ugly and short.
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
2 comments
bookshelves:
fiction
Read in November, 2007
I've been wanting to read it for years, ever since I saw my father read it. So when an anthropology course got me interested in prehistoric humans, this seemed like the perfect choice to read. Now, having read it, I'm a little unsure what I think about it.
On the one hand, I really liked the concept of the book, and I'm definitely planning to read the next one in the series, not because it ended on a cliffhanger, but also because I'm genuinely interested in just where the series is going. On...more
On the one hand, I really liked the concept of the book, and I'm definitely planning to read the next one in the series, not because it ended on a cliffhanger, but also because I'm genuinely interested in just where the series is going. On...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
fiction,
reviewed
Read in February, 1986
recommends it for:
those who enjoy historical fiction, especially those intrigued by pre/early humans & evolution
This is a great novel; it’s a real masterpiece. I love the whole series but I think this is by far the best book in it, and it stands on its own although I became completely hooked and I’ve eagerly awaited every new book in the series, and I really hope Auel finishes this series! I really admire these epic books. I appreciate stories that are historical fiction or fantasy where a complex society and intricate details about the lives of the inhabitants are described. I feel that I learned so ...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
fiction
The Earths Children series that this book begins tells the story of Ayla, a young orphan thrown into a primevil world of Neanderthals and primitive humans. Auel describes her journey with an incredibly detailed richness that can only be gained through lifelong study of the ice-age universe. While her depictions can sometimes be a tad off (I think her interpretation of Neanderthal society is a bit crooked and some of the technologies she has the humans using were way ahead of their time) it's e...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
2 comments
Read in January, 1987
I love these books and have read some in the Earth's Children series many times because I love the detailed descriptions of their way of life. I actually started reading them in the 4th or 5th grade. I loved reading about how they hunted, gathered and stored their food, made clothing and jewelry, and the contrasts between the Neanderthal and Cro-Magnon in those aspects. I also loved that Ayla was an innovative and strong woman, and I enjoyed learning about botany and medicinal uses for plants...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Ayla is an outsider among the clan. Found and adopted by the medicine woman of the clan during their migration, Ayla finds herself the target of an ambitious man hoping to become leader, training to be a medicine woman in her own right in hopes of earning some status within the caste, and challenging the set gender roles of her adopted culture.
I was impressed by Auel's research on flora and fauna. The first time I read this I was in seventh grade and stuck home convalescing from an injury....more
I was impressed by Auel's research on flora and fauna. The first time I read this I was in seventh grade and stuck home convalescing from an injury....more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
fiction
This was a fantastic book. I read it in 7th grade, and was absolutely obsessed with it (which is nothing less than stunning, because at that age most books that lacked dragons weren't worth my time...). In a way its perfect for around that age, because its all about struggling for acceptance and trying to learn the social norms of a society. But really, everybody has dealt with those issues, and will be able to empathize with the characters. And the setting is so unique, the writing so vibra...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
everyone
I read and could see and understand, the world of people more than 35,000 years ago; civilization is such a thin veneer. I couldn't put the book down because the Author brought this world to life for me.
Take away everything we rely on and fail to appreciate and you will still find the same heart of what we are, good and bad.
Five year old Ayla is left "really" alone when her parents are crushed to death when their cave collapses during an earthquake.
Another clan of humans ...more
Take away everything we rely on and fail to appreciate and you will still find the same heart of what we are, good and bad.
Five year old Ayla is left "really" alone when her parents are crushed to death when their cave collapses during an earthquake.
Another clan of humans ...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
favorites,
toreadagain
Read in January, 1997
I got the unabridged version of this book out of the library on tape to listen to while I was painting several rooms in my house one summer. I loved it. I thought it was a unique look at the author's idea of what life could have been like for neanderthal and cro-magnon man. Jean Auel obviously did a lot of reasearch for this book and it comes out in her descriptions of flora and fauna and what certain herbs were used for and how things might have been cooked, etc. A truly fascinating story a...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in December, 2007
Ugh. Throughout my childhood this book sat off-limits on my parents' bookshelf. As the kid who read White Fang 9 times in one year, I really wanted to jump on its primitive-wilderness-and-spunky-heroine train, but I was not allowed to do so - apparently some of its scenes were deemed 'too graphic' by my parents (Now I know why). I finally bought it this fall at a discount paperback book store and have been unable to finish it in a year. The prose, ugh. The nature-porn cheesiness, double ugh. The...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
7 comments
bookshelves:
loadofrubbish
recommends it for:
anyone who enjoyed the Da Vinci Code...
I found a copy of this book in the downstairs loo when I was about 9 and read it from cover to cover. The only parts I remember of it at all were bits about 'manhoods' and getting naughty on bearskin rugs in front of fires in caves. I think there are probably better books for pre-teens to be reading!!
Anyway, I picked it up again out of a box of old books in storage a couple of years back and only had to read the first twenty pages to see why it was even as a child that I skipped through the ...more
Anyway, I picked it up again out of a box of old books in storage a couple of years back and only had to read the first twenty pages to see why it was even as a child that I skipped through the ...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
1 comment
I read this series in high school. It was one of my mom's favorites and I just picked Clan of the Cave Bear off her pile one day and never looked back. There is no other series of books that I've read that could compare to these. You fall right into the prehistoric era, and you truly feel like you are there. Since I was reading this in junior high and high school, the sex scenes were also a plus. I'm sure if I re-read these books now I'd find the sexual parts a little to over the top for me...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
in-the-begining,
jean-auel,
made-into-movie--play
recommends it for: Jennifer
Read in January, 1980
recommended to GoldenjoyBazyll by:
Michaelorecommends it for: Jennifer
In a time long, long ago there once was one named Ayla.... brave- different- corageous. This little blonde haired girl who was able to have tears in her eyes was found by another race of people after an earth quake and being attacked by a cave lion. I read this book in what now seems like another life time- I was camping in Maine and became addicted to the ongoing story of this woman's life.
When you finish it you will definately want to read Mamoth Hunters/ Plains of Passage/ Valley of T...more
When you finish it you will definately want to read Mamoth Hunters/ Plains of Passage/ Valley of T...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
3 comments
bookshelves:
all-of-my-reviewed-books,
currently-owned-by-family,
novel,
series-earths-children
Okay, seriously. What the hell was I thinking, reading these books at an impressionable age? Like The Godfather, this is a book I didn't know I didn't want to read until I was several sequels in. I still regard this book with an inexplicable fondness (note the four stars!), despite having learned the concepts of "Mary Sue" and "what a pointless and poorly-done sex scene" in the intervening years.
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
The Earth's Children by Jean Auel starting with the Clan of the Cave Bear is a good start to her series starting in prehistoric times with dinosaurs and moving into a story of a girl from one tribe trying to fit in with another tribe, the flatheads, and all she encounters and how they survive. I was interesting and I read the rest of the series too many years ago.
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
2 comments
Read in January, 1986
Wow! Where to begin. This was sort of like a mash of trashy Hustler letters and "My side of the Mountain".
I remember being young & naive enough to ask my brother what a "throbbing member" was, only to get punched for not knowing.
Good times!
I remember being young & naive enough to ask my brother what a "throbbing member" was, only to get punched for not knowing.
Good times!
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
to-read
(on 161 people's shelves)
historical-fiction (on 142 people's shelves)
currently-reading (on 102 people's shelves)
fiction (on 61 people's shelves)
classics (on 16 people's shelves)
historical (on 15 people's shelves)
own (on 14 people's shelves)
fantasy (on 8 people's shelves)
books-i-own (on 6 people's shelves)
favorites (on 5 people's shelves)
More shelves...
historical-fiction (on 142 people's shelves)
currently-reading (on 102 people's shelves)
fiction (on 61 people's shelves)
classics (on 16 people's shelves)
historical (on 15 people's shelves)
own (on 14 people's shelves)
fantasy (on 8 people's shelves)
books-i-own (on 6 people's shelves)
favorites (on 5 people's shelves)
More shelves...































