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The Shelters of Stone (Earth's Children, Book 5)

The Shelters of Stone (Earth's Children, Book 5)

List Price: $7.99
Your Price: $7.19
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Bad graphic design.
Review: The first four books, as they originally came out, followed a consistent and attractive design pattern, thus they look like a series on your shelf and are artistically pleasing. The new binding looks completely different -- simplistic, boring -- and the text in no way lines up with that of the previous books. I don't believe they're going to get people to re-buy the earlier books in the new design. And the new design is not a correction to the original design. The decision makers at Crown Publishers have once again shown a lacking in sense of aesthetics and a lack of concern for their customers.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Biggest disappointment of 2002!
Review: I waited 12 years for this?!?

Most of the other reviews have said enough. Basically, this is disappointing. I barely was able to slog through it once, and have tried and tried to read it again (unlike the other books, which have been re-read countless times - especially Mammoth Hunters).

The book is written as though the author didn't remember details from the other books. Misspelled names...things that just don't jive with what had been established in the other books...and NO PLOT. And don't get me started about the baby's name, or how anticlimatic the Summer Meeting was. Ugh.

I can only hope that Book Six is better...however, I will be checking it out of the library rather than shelling out the money...

Sad, sad, sad...

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Come on, it's not THAT bad
Review: All those people that are slating the newest Jean Auel book do admittedly have a slight point. This book is not as good as Clan of the Cave Bear, it is however, in my opinion way better than the Vallety of the Horses - which was just an excuse for soft-porn Cave Man style!!! The Clan of the Cave Bear and the Mammoth Hunters were by far the best books in the series - found plains of Pasage too farfetched. Give Shelters of Stone a break, it's not a literary masterpiece but it is nice pleasant easy reading. It's a nice enough story, and I don't think that it is as terrible as everyone makes it out to be. Some of the characters are actually rather pleasant - Marthona and Zelandoni for example, Folora is personally a favorite of mine and I hope to see more of her. I do agree though that Jondalar is a waste of space. He is a one-dimensional character used only for Aylas sexual gratification. (Personally preferred Ranec and Thonalon and think that the wrong brother got taken out!) The only thing that makes Jondalar slightly less than perfect is his jealousy, and while Ayla doesn't even have this tiny flaw in her personality, she is a lovable character, and will always be a favorite, no matter how predictable she has become. Give it a chance, just try not to compare it to Clan of the Cave Bear coz to that book, it just doesn't make the grade, but on its own, it's quite enjoyable!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Ummm...I liked it.....
Review: Wow, it wasn't a bad a read as the others would have you think. It is very descriptive on life and customs and exsistance more than the Ayla/Jondalar story line. Her research of the time is amazing. Very admirable.

Anyway, it's fantasy, it's fiction! So what if Ayla is "perfect" and discovers everything and Jondalar is a sex object. Get lost in another time, away from real life for a while! Isn't that what a book is supposed to do?

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A let down, but there is still hope!
Review: Ever since I saw The Clan of the Cave Bear on TV in the 5th grade I have loved Jean Auel! Right after the movie ended I realized my dad HAD that book! In 5th grade I read The Clan of the Cave Bear, in 6th I read The Valley of Horses, in 7th I read The Mammoth Hunters and The Plains of Passage, and then finally in the 11th grade I got to read The Shelters of Stone!

I feel that I waited 6 years for a book of lower quality. Ayla no longer has serious struggles, just that people hate her for being perfect! I found myself imagining her making a major mistake, starting a fight, or even getting hurt while hunting just to add to the action! This was the overall most boring book of the series, even with all the descriptionary pages I glazed over in The Plains of Passage! I don't even remember what the masses of the pages were about!

This series is my favorite, I even started writing because of it! I refuse to give up hope! There is, after all, one more book! I'm still waiting, but not as eagerly...

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: A few comments on the graphic design.
Review: The graphic design of the book jacket is rotten! The first four books, as they originally came out, followed a consistent and attractive design pattern, thus they look like a series on your shelf and are artistically pleasing. The new binding looks completely different -- simplistic, boring -- and the text in no way lines up with that of the previous books. I don't believe they're going to get people to re-buy the earlier books in the new design. And the new design is not a correction to the original design. The decision makers at Crown Publishers have once again shown a lacking in sense of aesthetics and a lack of concern for their customers.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A reward for fans of the series
Review: I've loved the series since book one, and decided to re-read books 1-4 before peeking at Shelters of Stone. What a treat! Auel writes with such rich detail and creates main characters that are three-dimensional, physically, mentally and spirtually that they become part of the reader. She brings to life the pre-historic world of Europe where the glaciers greatly affected the climate, where mammoths and other gigantic mammals roamed the earth, and where Neanderthol and modern man lived side-by-side, if not cooperatively. The characters live off the sometimes harsh land and its rich bounty of plant and animal life. Auel's exhaustive research is evident in her descriptions of everything from the size of a giant deer's antlers to the raspberry bushes to the leather clothing to the primitive paintings on cave walls. You get the feeling that Auel herself has excavated Ayla's amulet pouch and opened it, personally discovering the treasures within.

In book one, Clan of the Cave Bear, we met Ayla, a young blond girl of five who is orphaned by an earthquake and rescued and then raised with love by the people of the Clan. These Neanderthols lead a life rich with spirituality and tradition. Unfortunately, the Others, apparently the direct ancestors of modern man, consider the Clan to be little more than animals, and fear and hate their mere existence. In book two we meet Jondalar, a Zelandoni who has journeyed far from his home. He is attracted to the enigmatic Ayla, but is also replused by her past interaction with "flatheads." Book three has Jondalar still a bit repulsed, but by the end, he unconditionally accepts Ayla and hopes that his family will feel the same. This potential prejudice creates constant tension throughout all the previous books, including book four, which is a somewhat tedious tale of their almost year-long journey to return to the land of the Zelandoni.

Ayla's unique childhood allow her some unique discoveries. She is the first to introduce the concept of raising animals for companionship and for assistance with the sometimes difficult tasks of every day life. She brings with her two steppe horses that she has trained for riding and hauling. And she is apparently responsible for introducing the canine as (wo)man's best friend. She believes that intercourse is the cause of reproduction, rather than the "mixing of spirits" as everyone else believes. She even discovers the predecessor to the modern match!!

In Shelters of Stone, Ayla and Jondalar finally reach the Zelandoni. Because she comes with such unusual skills, including that of healing, she is highly valued by most of the Zelandoni. Her strength of character helps pull her through some anti-Clan sentiment, but the reader revels in Ayla's power and strength, rather than agonizing over potential weaknesses. This book is full of love and support for Ayla, and the reader breathes a sigh of relief and feels an almost personal pride in her successes.

Auel's descriptions of everyday prehistoric life, from the toilet to the matrimonial ceremony are tremendously detailed and feel very authentic. This series is well-written and is well worth reading again and again. Book five, Shelters of Stone, is a reward to the loyal fan. Although you can read it as a stand-alone, you will feel more a part of Ayla's life if you read about her from the beginning. So pick up all five books and enjoy yourself!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: snooze-a-rama
Review: The only way I was able to finish this book was by skipping huge chunks of it. This series (Earth's Children), which began with such promise, has become completely lame. Jean Auel should put Ayla and Co. out of their misery if she can't think of some new story lines. If you must read this, get it from the library. Jean Auel doesn't deserve any of your hard earned money for this turkey.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Parts read like romance novels of today
Review: I loved all the Earth's Children books but was so disappointed to read loves scenes (over and over) in "Stone" that read like today's romance novels.
Jean Auel goes to great lengths to give the reader a feel for life 30,000 ago. I am just somewhat disappointed with the graphic love details.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Ice-age soap opera
Review: What do you get when you cross As The World Turns with the Flintsones? Jean Auel's Shelters of Stone. I really liked Clan of the Cave Bear, and Valley of the Horses was pretty good (if you overlook Ayla's almost McGiver like ability to invent every major innovation of the neolithic period), but this new book in the Children of Earth series falls flat in comparison.
Although Auel tries to keep the same attention to detail that was obvious in her previous books, it comes across here as just page filler trying to justify the price of a 700 page hardback, and much of the descriptive passages are very repetitive in nature. The plot itself is almost non-existent and what there is of it would be more appropriate on a afternoon soap opera or the pages of a Harlequin Romance... gratuitous sex scenes, jealous ex's plotting revenge, and leering bad guys trying to cause trouble, all with one-demensional characterization.
And, being an Anthoplogy major, I took exception to the obvious modern western mores, ethos, and cultural biases that she gave to these cro-magnon peoples. Although archeaologists have unearthed a lot of physical evidence from this period and place in history, it is a big stretch of the imagination to assume that they would react just like modern western humans to the same problems.


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