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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: 4 stars
Summary: Deffinately Worth Reading
Review: This book was very enjoyable. The characters continue to grow throughout the series. I would have liked more interaction between Ayla and Jondalar, perhaps I expected it after the last book where they were traveling alone much of the time. I also missed some of the interaction with the animals. I did find some stories repeditive as they were retold continually throughout the book. Maybe if I hadn't reread the whole series just before starting this book the reviewing of past stories would have been better apreciated. As for the way they introduce a character everytime they meet someone new it could get pretty old. The end of the book was the best part, I was just getting to the story I really wanted to read right before it ended. Overall I would recomend this book to anyone who has already started this series. Hopefully it will not take so many years for Jean M. Auel to get the next one published.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Wow
Review: Wow. Shelters of Stone was the first Jean M. Auel book I read- I was in the store and saw an interesting looking book on the bestsellers rack. So I picked it up, took it home, and started reading it. It was slow at first, and I had no idea what was going on, but after a while I got the idea and started to really like it. The introductions are repetative ("Ayla, of the Clan of the Cave Bear, Friend of Jondalar, Friend of Wolf, Protected by the spirit of the Cave Lion..."), and some might say the book has too much [love scenes] in it, and I agree- there is a bit too much, it's like, once every chapter. And the detail is repetative. But those are minor flaws. After I finished Shelters of Stone, I looked to see the other books in the series, and I checked out Clan of the Cave Bear from the library. The whole series rocks. I haven't read Valley of Horses yet, the Library didn't have it, but I'm about halfway through Mammoth Hunters.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Ayla the female Messiah 25000 years ago?
Review: I give this book a reluctant 3 stars, and only, because, it is in the line of a great series. At the risk of sounding redundant, the author repeats herself over and over again, like a doddering old senile person, who can't remember what they've told you five minutes ago. Finding myself reading about the same exact thing two pages later, and then a chapter later, and so on and so on, was very irritating. Jean please give us the credit to make the leap, when necessary, and please there is no need to pound our minds with repetitions, we get it the first or second or even third time, more is not fun. This book is a recap of the previous books, in the series, and a set up for the next one. You can totally skip this book and miss nothing. The only important things that happen in this book, are Ayla meeting Jondulars family, Jondular and Ayla getting married, having their baby, and then ending with Ayla agreeing to train to be a spiritual leader. Well, we knew those things were happening in the previous books, so what took so long to think up, nothing, new? I do think it was an ingenuous way, to recap the series, with Jondular and Ayla telling their stories, and adventures, to Jondular's family, highlighting the great art of story telling, being a way of life. But the editor should've cut this book in half, if not more. The first 500 pages of the book takes place in a time span of about one week, and is a chore to get through...it finally picks up the pace the last 300 pages. But the whole 800+ pages don't even cover a year's time. Even the few attempts at drama in this book fail to spark any excitement. I had to wonder as I was dredging through all the myriad of factual sounding detail, how much of it was really true to the time. Some of it is a bit unbelievable and the forward attitudes are a bit far fetched, for 25000 years ago. If those, long winded, sometimes tedious, details are not true, I would rather read about the subject in a history book. I choose to read historical novels to be entertained, as well as learn a few interesting facts. Please do not give me false history lessons in an novel, especially boring ones. And last, it has been my thought from the beginning of the series, that, maybe Ayla a is a sort of female Jesus, come to earth 2500 years ago, do you think? Well, I hope the next book lives up to the promise of the past books, and of good things to come, as set up in Shelters...Kathy Struewing.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Dissapointing?...not sure
Review: When I think of what the fifth book COULD have been like, yes this book was dissapointing. I feel let down, because I thought there was a fantastical element to Ayla's Saga. Throughout the series I felt, Auel was hinting at greater things to come for our heroine. But then again, I don't think we can expect "The Clan Of The Cave Bear" in this, or in any of the other books really. I think Auel is pulled between the "scientific and realism" (the repeating of landscape, herbal remedies etc.) and the "melodramtic and fantasy" of this series. I was hoping for more of the "fantastic and dramatised" element in this book but it wasn't to be. And when I think, perhaps Auel is really trying to depict, a closer telling of what life would have been like in the IceAge, I guess this book, is not so bad.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Extensive Research Shines Through
Review: Jean Auel's extensive research shines through in this latest book in the Earth's Children series.
One of the things I loved about the first book, "Clan of the Cave Bear" was Auel's unique take on how the clan and the "others" discovered new ways to hunt, cook, process organic materials, and so on. Besides enjoying an interesting plot line, we, the readers, were introduced to a whole new way of looking at life as it might have been lived in prehistoric times.
"Shelters of Stone" harks back to that first book with its insight into how the link may have been formed between prehistoric humans and the people we are today. I have read other reviews of the book which decry the absence of an action-filled plot. I disagree. I enjoyed "Shelters of Stone" exactly as it was written.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: The best thing about this hardback is the endflap maps
Review: Unlike most of the gang here, I only "discovered" Jean Auel's books about a month ago. I picked up Plains of Passage and was enthralled with Ms. Auel's delightful way of bringing human pre-history into a believable story. I went out and bought the first three books to fill in the gaps in my knowledge and enjoyed them all immensely. Having then read the whole series up to book #4, I decided to splurge and treat myself to a hardcover of JA's latest Shelters of Stone.

Unfortunately, I was extremely disappointed in this 741-page tome. I have to agree with most of the negative reviews here. I think the most frustrating aspect for me about this book is that JA layed the groundwork for some potentially interesting plot twists with the characters of Marona, Brukeval, Laramar and Madroman and the white quartz cave, but then failed to use them to create anything more than minor tension in the plot. I get the feeling that she was just setting the stage for book #6, but if SoS is any indication, she'll have to reintroduce all those potential villains in the next book anyway, so we'll be stuck with more copy and paste boilerplate in book six.

Did I say the best thing about this was the endflap maps? Actually, they would have been much more useful if they had included the names and locations of each of the Zelandonii caves on the maps instead of just their place names. Also, having all the Zelandonia with the same name only differentiated by cave number was bad enough, but then she sticks in the four Zelondoni of the 29th cave to really confuse things.

I agree with some of the other reviewers: Zelondoni of the 9th Cave was the most interesting new character in the book -- kind of a cross between Mother Superior and Bloody Mary in South Pacific. It's a shame JA has returned Jondalar to being Ayla's two-dimensional sex slave -- I really liked the way JA fleshed him out as a confused and jealous lover in Mammoth Hunters. Now that (Mammoth Hunters) was a really thoughtful illustration of the problems we all face in communicating our feelings and how easy it is to let a simple misunderstanding spiral out of control.

Will I buy book #6? Probably, as long as it doesn't take another 12 years to write.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Rehash...Rehash
Review: I was totally dissapointed by this book. It lacked originality and adventure as the other previous 4 books provided. The 700 some odd pages of introductions and rehash of the other books was totally boring . I almost put the book aside, but kept reading expecting something interesting to happen, but did not.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: You Can Skip this One
Review: I really wanted to love this book. I treasured the first book of the series. And, I sort of put up with the rest. But, this one was brutal to get through. Jean Auel seems to think that her readers are so dense that we need to read everything five times before we'll remember it. If she had taken out all the excess repeat text, the book would easily be 25% as long. I felt I had to finish the book, since I had devoted so much time to the series, but I was joyous when I was done.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Ayla, what happened to you?
Review: Oh, Ayla, Ayla! Wherefore art thou Ayla...?
In the first book we rooted for her. The young girl, without a family, who thinks differently, rebels, but most of all survives. We believed in her world...it was harsh and demanding. It was easy to suspend your disbelief. We believed in her. In the second book, still surviving, she found love and the ugly duckling turned into a swan. We were pleased to see that. After all she's been through, the girl deserved some happiness. In the third book, we wanted her accepted by her own (at least in between all the sex sessions). By the fourth book, Ayla was starting to get predictable and annoying. And then we waited.
Time passed, some of us finished high school, college, got a job, got married...from time to time hoping that we'll get to visit Ayla's world again. And finally there she was,perfect to the point of nusea, singing the longest and most annoying song. Every time Ayla looked at something, she turned into a heroine like no other. Her society, more politically correct than ours, never suffers. None of the caves fight with each other, in fact I don't think these people knew what war was. The herbal remedies that are more efficient than anything you can find in 21st century. And boy, does the traveler get treated better among the Zelandoni than today. (No one will ever steal from you in Ayla's world that's for sure.)
Honestly, sometimes I felt like I was watching a child's play made up with Barbie dolls: "Let's play house...this will be the home...people will eat here...oh, I know, let's have a little cup there so if someone wants a drink, they can use it!" The dialogue certainly didn't help.
Having said all that...and more, which was mentioned by other readers already (unlike the book, I will not be repetitious) I am waiting for the sixth part. Like a fool, I hope Ayla will become human again. And now, I think I will have a cup of tea, look to the right and notice cure for cancer sitting right in front of me.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Shelters of Stone
Review: I have to say that I did enjoy the book. As usual Jean Auel gives us things to think about. If it is true that we knew so much about healing at that time, then the dark ages really took a lot of that away didn't it? I like reading what she thinks happened during that time and deciding if If I see a different scenario.
As for the storyline. Yes, the sex was a long and I skipped a lot of that. And I was disappointed that the storyline didn't go any further along than it did. My first reaction was, "I have to wait ten or more years to get the rest of the story?" "I don't know if I will care by that time".
I think you have to enjoy science to enjoy Jean Auel and she can even get a little long winded in that area. But I can feel her exitement at what she learns during the research for her books.


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