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The Shelters of Stone

The Shelters of Stone

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Author: Jean M. Auel
Publisher: Crown
Category: Book

List Price: $28.95
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Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars 779 reviews

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1st
Pages: 753
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.5
Dimensions (in): 9.4 x 6.6 x 2.3

ISBN: 0609610597
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780609610596

Publication Date: April 30, 2002
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Dust Cover Missing. Help save a tree. Buy all your used books from Green Earth Books. Read -> Recycle -> Reuse!

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Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - The Shelters of Stone: Earth's Children
  • Hardcover - The Shelters of Stone: Earth's Children
  • Audio Cassette - Shelters of Stone, The (Earth's Children )
  • Mass Market Paperback - The Shelters of Stone (Earth's Children, Book 5)
  • Paperback - The Shelters of Stone (Earth's Children)
  • Unbound - The Shelters of Stone
  • Library Binding - The Shelters of Stone: Earth's Children
  • Audio Cassette - Shelters of Stone, The (Earth's ChildrenA ) (Earth's Children )
  • Audio Cassette - Shelters of Stone, The (Earth's ChildrenA ) (Earth's Children )
  • Audio CD - Shelters of Stone, The (Earth's ChildrenA ) (Earth's Children )
  • Audio CD - Shelters of Stone, The (Earth's ChildrenA ) (Earth's Children )
  • MP3 CD - The Shelters of Stone (Earth's Children)
  • MP3 CD - Shelters of Stone, The (Earth's ChildrenA ) (Earth's Children )
  • Hardcover - The Shelters of Stone (Earth's Children Series, No 5)
  • Paperback - The Shelters of Stone (Earth's Children (Paperback))
  • Hardcover - The Shelters of Stone (Random House Large Print (Cloth/Paper))

Similar Items:

  • The Plains of Passage
  • The Mammoth Hunters
  • The Valley of Horses
  • The Clan of the Cave Bear
  • Clan of the Cave Bear

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Jean Auel's fifth novel about Ayla, the Cro-Magnon cavewoman raised by Neanderthals, is the biggest comeback bestseller in Amazon.com history. In The Shelters of Stone, Ayla meets the Zelandonii tribe of Jondalar, the Cro-Magnon hunk she rescued from Baby, her pet lion. Ayla is pregnant. How will Jondalar's mom react? Or his bitchy jilted fiancee? Ayla wows her future in-laws by striking fire from flint and taming a wild wolf. But most regard her Neanderthal adoptive Clan as subhuman "flatheads." Clan larynxes can't quite manage language, and Ayla must convince the Zelandonii that Clan sign language isn't just arm-flapping. Zelandonii and Clan are skirmishing, and those who interbreed are deemed "abominations." What would Jondalar's tribe think if they knew Ayla had to abandon her half-breed son in Clan country? The plot is slow to unfold, because Auel's first goal is to pack the tale with period Pleistocene detail, provocative speculation, and bits of romance, sex, tribal politics, soap opera, and homicidal wooly rhino-hunting adventure. It's an enveloping fact-based fantasy, a genre-crossing time trip to the Ice Age. --Tim Appelo

Product Description
The Shelters of Stone opens as Ayla and Jondalar, along with their animal friends, Wolf, Whinney, and Racer, complete their epic journey across Europe and are greeted by Jondalar’s people: the Zelandonii. The people of the Ninth Cave of the Zelandonii fascinate Ayla. Their clothes, customs, artifacts, even their homes—formed in great cliffs of vertical limestone—are a source of wonder to her. And in the woman Zelandoni, the spiritual leader of the Ninth Cave
(and the one who initiated Jondalar into the Gift of Pleasure), she meets a fellow healer with whom to share her knowledge and skills.

But as Ayla and Jondalar prepare for the formal mating at the Summer Meeting, there are difficulties. Not all the Zelandonii are welcoming. Some fear Ayla’s unfamiliar ways and abhor her relationship with those they call flatheads and she calls Clan. Some even oppose her mating with Jondalar, and make their displeasure known. Ayla has to call on all her skills, intelligence, knowledge, and instincts to find her way in this complicated society, to prepare for the birth of her child, and to decide whether she will accept new challenges and play a significant role in the destiny of the Zelandonii.

Jean Auel is at her very best in this superbly textured creation of a prehistoric society. The Shelters of Stone is a sweeping story of love and danger, with all the wonderful detail—based on meticulous research— that makes her novels unique. It is a triumphant continuation of the Earth’s Children saga that began with The Clan of the Cave Bear. And it includes an amazing rhythmic poem that describes the birth of Earth’s Children and plays its own role in the narrative of The Shelters of Stone.



Customer Reviews:   Read 774 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars long awaited   November 17, 2008
C. Butler
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

We wait sooo very long for new books in this series that sometimes it's almost as though they were reads eons ago. I wanted this book to come out much more quickly than it did. But it literally took me a couple of years to read. I kept putting it down because I just couldn't get into it until after reading at least 100 pages. After that point I ravaged through it. Ms Auel could possibly have condensed this one somewhat. It hasn't deterred me from the next in the series. Whenever that comes along.


1 out of 5 stars how disappointing!   November 15, 2008
J. Hassler (WC, PA, USA)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I agree with a lot of the other low reviews of this book. The only good thing about it is that I borrowed it from my local library (doing so in protest of how long it took the author to release the book!) so I didn't actually buy the thing! There was just too much borrowed content from the previous three books, almost as if the author ran out of ideas and took from the previous three in order to fill her quota for the publisher. As a fan of the previous three books, this rehashing was totally unnecessary for much of the borrowed material was hard to forget, even if you hadn't picked up and re-read any of the previous three books in that ten year span it took to finish the series. IF you're a fan of the series and haven't read this book yet but are dying to see how it all ends, I suggest you do what I did and BORROW the book from a library so you can give it back when you're finished!


3 out of 5 stars Very disappointed   October 12, 2008
G Torrey (Fredericksburg, VA USA)
Very disappointed with the content and wrap-up. With the time it took to write and research, it seems that Jeal Auel was quick to add content that took away from not only this book, but the entire collection. Maybe to add pages or get more readers - I was really put off by the, lets say, pornographic genre scenes scattered within the pages of what could have been a great follow-up to the Plains of Passage.


5 out of 5 stars Riviting   September 21, 2008
G. Petrie
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Absolutly riving - as good as all of her others. My only disappointment was coming to the end of the book!


2 out of 5 stars 600 unnecessary pages.   September 19, 2008
William E. Waldeck (Tampa Bay)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

While I am a BIG fan of the 'Earth's Children series and bought every volume, I was extremely disappointed in the final book 'Shelters of Stone'. Remove all the flowery scene descriptions and constant recapping of the previous 4 volumes and the book would have been no more than 100 pages. What a let down after such an incredible journey. I doubt a 6th volume would fill the void left by this blunder.