Earth's Children #1

El clan del oso cavernario

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Esta novela de gran vigor y asombrosa belleza es una conmovedora saga acerca de los seres humanos, sus relaciones y los límites del amor. A través de la magnifica narrativa de Jean M. Auel, regresamos a los albores de la civilización moderna, y en compañía de una nina Ilamada Ayla, penetramos en la cruda y a la vez hermosa Edad de Hielo y en el mundo que los hombres y mujeres de esa época compartieron con quienes se Ilamaban a si mismos, el Clan del oso cavernario. Un desastre natural deja a la niña errando sola por una tierra desconocida y peligrosa, hasta que la encuentra una mujer que pertenece al Clan, un grupo de gente muy distinta de la suya. A medida que Ayla aprende acerca del modo de vida del Clan y sobre los métodos curativos de Iza, la mayoría acaba por aceptarla y hasta Iza y Creb, el viejo Mog-ur, llegan a quererla. Es el brutal y orgulloso joven, destinado a ser su próximo líder, quien percibe en su manera de ser diferente, una amenaza en contra de su autoridad. Entonces, desarrolla hacia la extraña chica que vive entre ellos y que pertenece a los Otros, un odio constante y profundo, y está decidido a vengarse.

548 pages, Paperback

First published May 4,1980

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About the author

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Jean Marie Auel is an American writer who wrote the Earth's Children books, a series of novels set in prehistoric Europe that explores human activities during this time, and touches on the interactions of Cro-Magnon people with Neanderthals. Her books have sold more than 45 million copies worldwide.

Community Reviews

Rating(3.9 / 5.0, 99 votes)
5 stars
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99 reviews All reviews
July 14,2025
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I have always found history to be quite interesting.

However, unfortunately, this book is not for me.

After a while, you will know what their food is, what weapons they use, and what the relationships and rules are within the tribe.

Ultimately, I just found it to be too long-winded and it even made me sleepy.

No, in that regard, I would have preferred to read a short and concise story about this tribe instead of it being so extremely drawn out.

Perhaps if the author had presented the information in a more engaging and succinct manner, I would have had a different opinion.

As it stands, this book failed to hold my attention and left me feeling rather disappointed.

Nevertheless, I still maintain my interest in history and will continue to seek out other sources that can provide me with a more captivating and informative experience.

July 14,2025
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Jean is a researcher who has dedicated her life to the study of Neanderthals.

She often jokes that her story telling skills are roughly equivalent to those of her subjects.

Jean firmly believes that fiction should be written in the form of a dull and tedious encyclopaedia.

She feels that this approach will allow readers to truly immerse themselves in the details and facts of the subject matter.

Jean's work is not for the faint of heart, as it requires a great deal of patience and attention to detail.

However, she is passionate about her research and is determined to share her findings with the world in the most accurate and comprehensive way possible.

Despite the challenges she faces, Jean remains committed to her work and continues to strive for excellence in everything she does.

Her unique approach to writing and research has earned her a reputation as a respected and innovative scholar in the field of anthropology.
July 14,2025
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When it comes to this book, one should first start with the fact that the very idea of the story is really quite good: the encounter of Cro-Magnon (or otherwise early anatomically modern humans) with Neanderthals, and more precisely, the story of one of the Cro-Magnon girls who ends up in the Neanderthal clan.


I'm not a big history lover in this way, but at least from the perspectives of lifestyle and culture, almost all historical periods are interesting to me, including the early Stone Age, during which the plot develops. And the Neanderthal VS human plot line is very, very favorable for writing a novel. Currently, there are five theories as to why Neanderthals became extinct:


a) They assimilated with humans (because, it turns out, interbreeding between species was possible and a large majority of us carry approximately 1.8 to 2.6% of Neanderthal-derived genes in our genome);


b) We physically wiped them out;


c) We lived peacefully beside them for a long time and they simply died out due to demographic problems (competition with us smarter ones, of course, didn't help either, but shit happens, it's not our fault);


d) Due to a different immune system, they couldn't withstand the bacteria and parasites we brought;


e) Climate change, due to which Neanderthals couldn't adapt to the era and the changed rules;


The most interesting part is that there is actually no information that would more convincingly support any of the theories, so it can be said that they are all equally likely, which leaves a very, very wide freedom of action and theories for writers.


Jean Auel herself prepared for writing this book more than what are called "method actors" prepare for a role - for months and months she didn't deviate from the pursuit of paleologists, joined a survivalist group to learn how to prepare hides, tan skins, start a fire, chip stone, spent a lot of time learning and researching medicinal plants. All of this is very impressive, but it also has its price: the book sometimes more resembles not a novel, but a manual for handicrafts, and the biggest minus is that all these stories about daily tasks and the gathering of medicinal plants and the making of tools simply never end. This is not bad, to be honest, I read a not small part of the information with great interest, and the research work should also be separately mentioned. The only problem for me in the English language are the descriptive nouns, especially the names of birds and plants. There were so many names here, and not only that, such that I haven't even heard them much in Lithuanian, and here they also had to be translated from another language.


In any case, this is a rather not bad coming-of-age novel, true, in very unusual circumstances. But I really liked it just because of its originality and non-traditional plot. Of course, there is a not small part of the "really?" factor, but there's nothing to be done about it - if we're talking about what was 40,000 years ago, there are certain moments that will ultimately come down to take it or leave it. I'm among those who took it. 4*, although with a bit of an advance - but three, I think, would be too few, because I really read this book with great interest and pleasure.

July 14,2025
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Fantastic! Phenomenal! The ultimate in creative, imaginative story telling.

\n  How else can I describe a book that transports the reader back to a time in history where there were no books, writing or pictorial records to chart early life forms but makes it so believable you think this could have actually taken place?\n
What an extraordinary imagination author Jean M. Auel tapped into by taking the fossils we've all seen in museums and the numerous pieces of scientific hypothetical information and forming a pre-historical fiction around them. The details of the flora, fauna, and terrain of the prehistoric earth are described in such a way that the reader truly feels as if this novel is part story, part history lesson.

When I first learned about this book years ago, I was intrigued. I thought it would be more Fantasy fiction, but since I'm not averse to this genre, I decided to give it a try. Eventually, I picked it up during one of my many book hauls. However, it sat on my shelf for a long time. It's a thick book, and I avoided it as my next choice many times, not wanting to tackle something that would take up so much time. For some reason, I pictured the Hollywood version of scruffy cave people with shaggy hanging furs and bones in their hair. This is why I avoided it. I categorized it as Fantasy and never seemed to be in the mood for that.

There's a lyric in a song by hip hop artist Talib Kweli that makes reference to The Clan of the Cave Bear. Hearing that song would remind me that I needed to read the book. But I kept putting it off. Sometimes it would make it into a book lineup but would lose out to other books that I was more interested in at the time. And a few times it got pushed back on the shelf, and I forgot I even owned it. For all these avoidances, I say to The Clan of the Cave Bear, I'm very sorry. I had no idea it was so good. It took the political drama of my country's election for me to not only remember this book but also go seeking it out as a distraction. I joked with friends that I didn't even want to live in 2016 right now. I grabbed this book and have gone back to caveman times to hold onto my sanity. And I've enjoyed every single moment lost in time with this book. I'm glad I stopped judging it by its cover or my stereotypical assumption of cave people.

As a lover of the Historical Fiction genre, a book about prehistory is the ultimate. I'll tell those who haven't read it. It's not Hollywood bones and shaggy carpet clothing at all. It's realistic, engaging, engrossing, and tribal. And you finish the book knowing you want to continue to the next one. I actually went out and purchased the next book when I was halfway through this first one. I don't have that great luck with series, so I hope it does continue to carry me through to the last book.

I'm giving it 5 stars. It was very entertaining, transportive, and as an author, what a project.
July 14,2025
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This book was truly powerful for me.

It vividly brought to life a world that had disappeared more than 10,000 years ago. The character of Ayla is such an inspiration and a strong woman. I have a deep love for her dedication to life, to her tribe, and to herself. The fact that she became a medicine woman is truly remarkable. This book is truly one of a kind. It takes the reader on a journey through a prehistoric world, filled with adventure, love, and survival. The author's attention to detail and ability to create a believable and engaging world is truly impressive. I would highly recommend this book to anyone who is interested in history, adventure, or just a good story.
July 14,2025
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In this review, I will solely focus on the historical value of this novel. (For my comprehensive global review, refer to my general account on Goodreads https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...). Jean M. Auel truly exerted her utmost efforts to reconstruct the Neanderthal world, considering the knowledge available around 1980. The detailed descriptions of the physiognomy of this Homo Sapiens' nephew, the making of stone tools, hunting techniques, diet, and the flora and fauna in the then habitat (approximately 30,000 Before Present) are remarkable. One can observe that she has studied every aspect meticulously.

However, inevitably, she has filled in numerous other features of the Neanderthals' world through reasoned fantasy and speculation, endowing it with narrative coherence and some dramatization.

Forty years after the book's publication, some of those elements curiously turn out to be correct. Chief among these is her intuition that Neanderthals and Homo Sapiens interbred. This was disputed by paleontologists for years, but it wasn't until 2010 that genetic research unequivocally demonstrated that both human species indeed produced progeny. On average, about 2% of the genetic material in non-African people today can be traced back to Neanderthal origins. Perhaps Auel's guess was merely a creative discovery to provide her story with sufficient dramatic content, but it was a highly successful one.

Regrettably, I must be far less enthusiastic about other creative elements. For instance, she portrays the clan as a small group leading a relatively sedentary life in a spacious cave with demarcated family areas, which absolutely does not conform to archaeological findings. There is also limited scientific support for the totemism to which she devotes a great deal of attention. There is even occasional mention of "gods," which is a very clear anachronism. Auel gives the relations within the clan a strong hierarchical character with a distinct leader, contrary to the prevailing scientific opinion that the itinerant Neanderthals had a rather egalitarian form of society. I have the impression that both the totemism and the strict hierarchy within her Neanderthal group were inspired by the culture of Native Americans. She also pays a great deal of attention to the man-woman relationship, unambiguously underlining the dependency of women. This is also an assumption of Auel that cannot be deduced from the archaeological record at all, and the relative monogamy outlined in the book is also her own interpretation, based on nothing.

What is downright disturbing are the narrator's continuous interventions clearly explaining how limited Neanderthals were in their physical and mental abilities and how that would lead to their downfall. Repeatedly, she emphasizes how superior the Sapiens ("the Others") were. I suspect that here, Auel has yielded to the educator in her, but it is needlessly explanatory and clearly derogatory towards the abilities of Neanderthals.

In conclusion, this book should by no means be regarded as an introduction to the world of an extinct human species as too many fantasy elements have been incorporated. But as a dramatic story in a highly creative setting, this work is undoubtedly worthwhile!
July 14,2025
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I came to The Clan of the Cave Bear at the Mission Viejo Library when the novel I'd wanted next -- The Witching Hour by Anne Rice -- was out. Wandering the hardcover fiction section, a row of books at eye level with thick, colorful spines and the same author caught my attention. Published in 1980, this bestseller not only launched five sequels but also a much-maligned film adaptation in 1986. It became an industry for Jean M. Auel, whose published fiction has been solely dedicated to this Ice Age series.

Set in the late Pleistocene Epoch, perhaps as many as 35,000 years ago, and in an area that resembles the present-day Crimean Peninsula, The Clan of the Cave Bear begins with a 5-year-old girl named Ayla. Her tribe is wiped out in an earthquake while she is off swimming in a stream. After narrowly escaping being a meal for cave lions, Ayla is found starving and badly wounded by a tribe of wanderers who have also been displaced by the quake.
The leader of the wanderers, Brun, is brown-haired, stocky, and bow-legged. He recognizes Ayla as one of "The Others", a tribe that is blonde-haired, lean, and tall. Communicating with sign language and grunts as much as words, Brun initially ignores Ayla, considering her "Not clan". However, his medicine woman, Iza, a 30-year-old senior citizen, takes pity on the girl and brings her back from the brink of death. The wanderers are desperately seeking shelter, and it is Ayla who directs Iza's attention to a perfect cave.
One of the main reasons to read this novel is Auel's credible portrayal of Ayla as the ultimate outsider. She grows to maturity with the sense that she is different from everyone else and struggles to find her purpose. Ayla looks other clan members in the eye, which is a major faux pas for a woman. Her physique allows her to swim, and she uses this ability to save the life of a clan member from drowning.
Ayla's curiosity also leads her to teach herself how to use a sling and hunt with it, a crime punishable by death for a woman. Auel creates a great deal of tension by pitting Ayla against Broud, the ill-tempered son of Brun and the heir apparent to the clan's leadership. Broud is deeply offended by Ayla's ways and engages her in a battle of wills. I kept reading because I wanted to see the moment when Ayla would stand up for herself and go all Tina Turner on Ike, in this case, Broud.
Auel's research, which began in 1977 in consultation with numerous experts, offers interesting insights into prehistoric survival. It shows the work of female gatherers preparing foods and medicines, and the work of male hunters tracking and killing game, most memorably a trek north to hunt mammoth. However, my attention waned when it came to descriptions of religious rites, where there seemed to be less at stake.
While the characters know more about the natural world than we ever will, their weakness is a shortened life span. Ayla reaches womanhood and achieves the status of Woman Who Hunts by age 10. I found the biology of the characters to be unique, a facet that was lost in the film version with Daryl Hannah, who was 25 years old and 5'10", cast in the role of Ayla.
The major weakness of The Clan of the Cave Bear is Auel's geriatric writing, which is plodding and tells too much. I consider myself intelligent enough to imagine what characters are thinking or feeling based on how they act and what they say to each other. I scanned the last 100 pages because there was simply not enough at stake. At no point does the reader think that Auel's heroine might be killed, and the author's visible attempt at writing prevented me from becoming fully absorbed in the world she was creating.
Fortunately, for me, writing takes a back seat. I can excuse a lot of telling instead of showing if the author creates a compelling character, builds a fantastic world, and makes me reluctant to put down the book without knowing what will happen to the character. I'm recommending this to readers with an interest in the prehistoric world or in how to build a series. I can't say that Auel hooked me into reading the sequels, but for a debut novel, this is a good one.
July 14,2025
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Girl power in the age of Neanderthals
I had not expected it at all, but I truly enjoyed reading this. As a story, it is quite powerful. Auel has made an enormous creative effort to reconstruct the Neanderthals' world, basing it on what was known at the time of publication in 1980. She has woven an original and dramatic storyline around it, incorporating many of her own interpretations and fantasy elements, of course. With the main character Ayla, the Sapiens girl who was found by the Neanderthal tribe and grows up with them, she actually places a clear feminist emphasis. This is also manifestly a political novel, in which the thoughtful tribal leader Brun is contrasted with the rash incoming leader Broud.

Especially the psychological aspect of the novel is extraordinarily strong. This is evident in the passages where the characters ponder their own feelings and those of others in the clan, about how to best handle certain situations and how to reconcile long and short term goals. There is clearly also a teacher in Auel, as she gives a great deal of attention to explaining the special features of clan life, such as the magical ceremonies, the techniques for hunting or using medicinal plants. However, sometimes she exaggerates, which slows down the story. From a historical and scientific perspective, her book does not hold up: her Neanderthal world contains too many fantasy elements. But her basic intuition, namely that Neanderthals and Homo Sapiens have interbred in the meantime, has been confirmed by paleo-genetic research. For more on these historical aspects, see my History-account on Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show....
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