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The Clan of the Cave Bear (Clan of the Cave Bear, 1)

The Clan of the Cave Bear (Clan of the Cave Bear, 1)

List Price: $44.95
Your Price: $29.67
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I love this book and can't wait to read Valley of the Horses
Review: In The Clan of the Cave Bear, by Jean M. Auel, I was captivated by the spirit and life of the Clan. At the start of the novel, these people seem almost like savages. By the end I was in tears when Alla lost a loved one. The struggles and accomplishments Alla, the main character, experienced, seemed to be my very own. The story begins with an earthquake that tears a little girl away from the only family and home that she knows. Wandering lost in the wilderness, Alla is chosen by the great cave lion to bear his totum marks for the rest of her life. As the child lay dying of starvation and infection from the giant gashes which the huge cat tore into her leg, Alla passes out along side of a path. The Clan, a group of neandrathal cave people, is searching for a new cave at the time, stumble across Alla's broken body. Isa, the Clan's medicine woman, lifts the child up and decideds to raise her as her own. As the story unfolds, we see the human child, who not only looks different than the people of the clan, but by nature, acts and thinks differently, growing up and trying hard to understand how she can possibly be normal when she looks, feels, and seems so totally different than the only people she can ever remember. This is an exciting, interesting and inviting story that I would recommend to anyone. The book is not really suitable for children under age 14, due to some topics of natural human life that cannot be avoided. However, I don't think that it would be considered offensive to anyone. I personally bought the audio book. This makes it possible to do other things while listening to the story, such as sewing, drawing, computer, etc. IT'S A GREAT BOOK! BUY IT OR BORROW IT RIGHT NOW!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not a bad book, if you realize it's only fiction...
Review: The story of an orphaned little girl being adopted by a neanderthal clan in the latest ice age is very original, especially the description of their language, food, medicines, and ways of life in general. But what disturbs me about the book is whether these facts are actually correct: forMrs. Auel's saying her book is based on a very vast study of the subject. But a few years ago I've read an article about how neanderthals could talk just like us if anybody bothered to teach them - this is a MAJOR slip for a book that's supposed to be more or less accurate... I do understand how the fact that the Clan's language is not a vocal one enhances the plot of this book and the following ones, but maybe this inaccuracy should have been mentioned right next to Mrs. Auel's statement about her vast research... This way, I feel I can never be sure about any other 'facts' in the story.

Another issue I wasn't comfortable about in the whole series is its feminist message. Even though I'm a woman, and believe in women's rights, I think that the importance of each gender's role in the clan wasn't given enough attention just to stress the 'unfairness' of it all. I think it's wrong to judge a society so different from our own, in time, herritage and customs, by our own standards of right and wrong.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Emma's review on The Clan of the Cave Bear
Review: The Clan of the Cave Bear, by Jean M Auel, was a fantastic book. The idea of Ayla's family being killed and then being separated from society and found by a group of 'uncivilized' and 'under developed' Clan, makes for a great story full of adventure and excitement. There is never a dull moment around the tall, blue eyed Ayla and the rest of the people in her Clan. You find yourself not able to put down the book because you want to see what sort of trouble Ayla will get in, if she'll finally master the art of her sling, or if she'll finally be accepted into the Clan.
Auel captures each character and the Clan as a whole so well and you learn so much about them. She created a 'society' for her book without leaving out any detail. Auel created their 'language', social rank, hunting habits, religion, etc. which really helps you understand the Clan that much better.
Overall I really enjoyed this book and recommend it to anyone who likes adventurous stories with a heroic main character. It's a good book to pick up when there's nothing to do and you're looking for some entertainment. And after you read The Clan of the Cave Bear there are four others that follow. I hope you enjoy them as much as I did.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Read this!
Review: This amazing book remains one of my favorites ever. This might sound 'sappy', but it's true! With beautiful writing, a well-researched setting, an engrossing plot, and lovable, if debatably human, characters, what more could one ask for in a novel? I normally read fantasy, and this exotic, nearly made-up setting sometimes qualifies at that -- but this is simply better than just about every fantasy novel out there!

Set in Ice Age Asia, this chronicles the life of a woman named Ayla. It begins with her as a young child, orphaned, who is adopted into a clan of Neandertals. Just about every novel I've read including Neandertals has them act human -- but these people are individual and distinguished from their Cro-Magnon contemporaries, without acting in the slightest like caveman savages. Jean Auel explains their larger brain mass, factoring it into the personality of the members of the 'Clan of the Cave Bear' (describing all of this race, not merely the clan Ayla is adopted into).

The young Ayla is different from the Clan people -- while not exactly 'smarter', she is far more creative. Not only that, but she's a tomboy. She defies Clan tradition by acting male -- something Clan females would never have considered. Yet the Clan members are no less special for their traditional actions. Iza, the clan medicine woman, and Creb ( a 'mog-ur', or shaman), are wonderful characters. And Ayla is amazing, throughout her life in the book.

Giving away the plot in this would be pointless. But "The Clan of the Cave Bear" -did- make me cry at the end. I don't see how anyone couldn't cry. I've cried at it every time I've read it. It's just that beautiful.

I'd definitely recommend this book to anyone. If you haven't already ordered this...do so! It's great. The only complaint I have about this is Ayla's ingenuity. She manages to come up with so many new ideas, ones that would be revolutionary even by Cro-Magnon standards, that it didn't seem realistic. Still, this doesn't detract from the story at all.

5 stars out of 5, no question about it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Interesting, Adventurous and Heart Warming...
Review: Earth Children Series:

1.)THE CLAN OF THE CAVE BEARS

2.)THE VALLEY OF HORSES

3.)THE MAMMOTH HUNTERS

4.)PLAINS OF PASSAGE

5.)THE SHELTERS OF STONE

What more can I say that 244 Amazon reviewers has not. This book is full of adventure and it let readers see through the past, on how early humans (cro-mags) live their life. Their cultures, beliefs, custom and tradition. Ayla, being born to Others was found almost dying by one of the Clan of the Cave Bears. She was eventually adopted by them and have to adjust to her new family, new environment. The challenge was overwhelming and I ache for the little girl. But then again, this is also where I admire her courage, strength and determination. The affection between Ayla, Creb and Iza was a heart warming read. I admit some parts of this book falls a bit verbose, other parts I find a bit far fetch or a bit hard to believe considering the time plot. I am not an Anthropologist so I may be wrong but Ayla's intelligence of finding and realizing things on her own sometimes left me doubtful especially for a girl her age. However, it's really not too deep to distract me. In fact, it piqued my interest all the more and made me read on. Overall, this book is imaginative, educational, entertaining and worth your time.

This is definitely a different reading material compare to my usual historical romance novels but I am thankful my mother in law suggested this book to me. It's the first of Ms. Auel's Earth Children Series. I am now in the middle of the second book of the series and so far, it is as interesting as this one. My mother in law waited 10 years for the fifth installment of this series and I'm glad I don't have to wait that long. It'll be out next year, 2002.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Prehistoric soap opera
Review: It's obvious that a lot of research went into the writing of this book, and Auel included just enough factual detail to barely qualify the story as historical fiction. But it is a soap opera - a well-written soap opera - and only time and setting separate this story from modern life. In fact, the characters, and their complex thoughts and emotions, as well as their ability to reason and communicate, seem more advanced than us (which is not saying much, I grant). Ayla is exceptional, almost super-human in every way, and by the end of Book Two in the series I expect she will have invented the hunting rifle, discovered calculus, cured cancer, and opened up day care centers for orphaned and deformed children. Who says blonds are dumb? I've heard from other disappointed people who are big fans of this first book that the rest of the series resembles a Harlequin romance, but I will not find out for myself.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the most entertaining I have read.
Review: I enjoyed the characters in this story. The complexity of the every day life for these characters is portrayed as though one is sitting right there. The visual language takes the reader to time and place of the characters.

There is love, pain, heartache, family ties, loneliness. It is a tail of life as it could have been so long ago.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent book
Review: I love this book in the "Clan" Series. The characters are fresh and exciting, the story is new and bold, the details are fascinating and exquisite. To read how the people of prehistoric time could have lived and communicated was a great treat. The girl Ayla adapts and grows to live among the Clan people, but never really gives up her inner self which is freed to develop in the later books. This particular book is excellent as a stand-alone story and should be enjoyed by itself, since the rest of the series leaves much to be desired.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This book was only the beginning for me....
Review: I gave birth to my daughter, Summer Rose, when I was 17. Shortly after I noticed such a drastic change in my lifestyle. Throughtout my life the only time I picked up a book was in school when it was assigned. Never had I dreamed of reading for recreational purposes. I thought my own mother was crazy for even willingly picking up a book. However, ever since I was a child my facination with pre-history and native american history has always pulled at my blood and has crept not only in my brain but has made a place in my heart. Becoming a mother myself gave me the leverage I needed to finally pick up a book and see what the written word has provided for individuals such as myself. My first book to read for the reason as just because was The Clan of the Cave Bear by Jean M. Auel. Not only did it grasp my attention but it blew me away. Never in my life did I expect to love reading as much as I read this book. I thought the details and research was to my knowledge accurate (but of course I'm no expert!) The story line was believable and very hard to put down. I thought nothing would ever top this until I heard that there was a sequel...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Clan Of The Cave Bears Review
Review: The Clan Of The Cave Bears is a story of a young girls journey from a homeless child to a young woman raised by a people different then those biologically related to her. Ayla was five when her people were killed in a devastating earthquake. After wandering alone for weeks she is found unconscious by a medicine woman of a homeless Clan. The leader of this Clan sees her as a pet project for his sister Iza, the medicine woman, and believes she would die even with her help. After being nursed back to help she is raised in the ways of the Clan by Iza and her brother, Creb. After a series of events leads the leader's son to an intense hatred of her, Ayla's life takes a different turn than she imagined. She struggles to cope with her differences between her and the people she loves and for acceptance of the Clan. The book takes you through age five to her early teenage years. Jean M. Auel never fails to show the changes in Ayla's personality and thoughts and she becomes a woman. The people of the Clan change as well: Ayla changed their lives forever giving them a unique status when they join several Clans for the Clan Gathering.
Ayla discovers many different things, that extend well beyond her own inventions and into cultural differences of her foster-people and her. Her difference from the Clan extends well beyond appearance, but that is conquered by her love for her foster parents, Iza and Creb, changing her and their way of thinking forever. As the first in a series of five books this is a wonderful beginning to the life of Ayla, a young girl lost in the woods of her differences to her "family." I found this book wonderful to read and could not wait to read the next in the series after this one.


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