The Plains of Passage: Earth's Children, Book Four
The Plains of Passage: Earth's Children, Book Four book cover

The Plains of Passage: Earth's Children, Book Four

Paperback – June 25, 2002

Price
$15.98
Format
Paperback
Pages
784
Publisher
Bantam
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0553381658
Dimensions
6.05 x 1.7 x 9.15 inches
Weight
1.8 pounds

Description

"Gripping."-- Boston Sunday Herald "Pure entertainment...exhilarating. "-- Los Angeles Times From the Inside Flap x92s enthralling Earthx92s Children series has become a literary phenomenon, beloved by readers around the world. In a brilliant novel as vividly authentic and entertaining as those that came before, Jean M. Auel returns us to the earliest days of humankind and to the captivating adventures of the courageous woman called Ayla. With her companion, Jondalar, Ayla sets out on her most dangerous and daring journey--away from the welcoming hearths of the Mammoth Hunters and into the unknown. Their odyssey spans a beautiful but sparsely populated and treacherous continent, the windswept grasslands of Ice Age Europe, casting the pair among strangers. Some will be intrigued by Ayla and Jondalar, with their many innovative skills, including the taming of wild horses and a wolf; others will avoid them, threatened by what they cannot understand; and some will threaten them. But Ayla, with no memory of her own people, and Jondalar, with a hunger to return to his, are impelled ’s enthralling Earth’s Children series has become a literary phenomenon, beloved by readers around the world. In a brilliant novel as vividly authentic and entertaining as those that came before, Jean M. Auel returns us to the earliest days of humankind and to the captivating adventures of the courageous woman called Ayla. With her companion, Jondalar, Ayla sets out on her most dangerous and daring journey--away from the welcoming hearths of the Mammoth Hunters and into the unknown. Their odyssey spans a beautiful but sparsely populated and treacherous continent, the windswept grasslands of Ice Age Europe, casting the pair among strangers. Some will be intrigued by Ayla and Jondalar, with their many innovative skills, including the taming of wild horses and a wolf; others will avoid them, threatened by what they cannot understand; and some will threaten them. But Ayla, with no memory of her own people, and Jondalar, with a hunger to return to his, are impelled Jean M. Auel is an international phenomenon. Her Earth's Children® series has sold more than 45 million copies worldwide and includes The Clan of the Cave Bear, The Valley of Horses, The Mammoth Hunters, The Plains of Passage, The Shelters of Stone, and The Land of Painted Caves . Her extensive research has earned her the respect of archaeologists and anthropologists around the world. She has honorary degrees from four universities and was honored by the French government's Ministry of Culture with the medal of an "Officer in the Order of Arts and Letters". She lives with her husband, Ray, in Oregon. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The woman caught a glimpse of movement through the dusty haze ahead and wondered if it was the wolf she had seen loping in front of them earlier.She glanced at her companion with a worried frown, then looked for the wolf again, straining to see through the blowing dust."Jondalar Look!" she said, pointing ahead.Toward her left, the vague outlines of several conical tents could just be seen through the dry, gritty wind.The wolf was stalking some two-legged creatures that had begun to materialize out of the dusty air, carrying spears limed directly at them."I think we've reached the river, but I don't think we're the only ones who wanted to camp there, Ayla," the man said, pulling on the lead rein to halt his horse.The woman signaled her horse to a stop by tightening a thigh muscle, exerting a subtle pressure that was so reflexive she didn't even think of it as controlling the animal.Ayla heard a menacing growl from deep in the wolf's throat and saw that his posture had shifted from a defensive stance to an aggressive one. He was ready to attack! She whistled, a sharp, distinctive sound that resembled a bird call, though not from a bird anyone had ever heard. The wolf gave up his stealthy pursuit and bounded toward the woman astride the horse."Wolf, stay close!" she said, signaling with her hand at the same time. The wolf trotted beside the dun yellow mare as the woman and man on horseback slowly approached the people standing between them and the tents.A gusty, fitful wind, holding the fine loess soil in suspension, swirled around them, obscuring their view of the spear holders. Ayla lifted her leg over and slid down from the horse's back. She knelt beside the wolf, put one arm over his back and the other across his chest, to calm him and hold him back if necessary. She could feel the snarl rumbling in his throat and the eager tautness of muscles ready to spring. She looked up at Jondalar. A light film of powdery dirt coated the shoulders and long flaxen hair of the tall man and turned the coat of his dark brown mount to the more common dun color of the sturdy breed. She and Whinney looked the same. Though it was still early in the summer, the strong winds oft the massive glacier to the north were already desiccating the steppes in a wide band south of the ice.She felt the wolf tense and strain against her arm, then saw someone new appear from behind the spear holders dressed as Mamut might have dressed for an important ceremony, in a mask with aurochs's horns and in clothes painted and decorated with enigmatic symbols.The mamut shook a staff at them vigorously and shouted. "Go away, evil spirits! Leave this place!"Ayla thought it was a woman's voice shouting through the mask, but she wasn't sure; the words had been spoken in Mamutoi, though. The mamut dashed toward them shakini the staff again, while Ayla held back the wolf. Then the costumed figure began chanting and dancing, shaking the staff and high-stepping toward them quickly, then back again as though trying to scare them off or drive them away, and succeeding, at least, in frightening the horses.She was surprised that Wolf was so ready to attack, wolves seldom threatened people. But, remembering behavior she had observed, she thought she understood. Ayla had often watched wolves when she was teaching herself to hunt, and she knew they were affectionate and loyal to their own pack. But they were quick to drive strangers away from their territory, and they had been known to kill other wolves to protect what they felt was theirs.To the tiny wolf pup she had found and brought back to the Mamutoi earthlodge, the Lion Camp was his pack; other people would be like strange wolves to him. He had growled at unknown humans who had come to visit when he was barely half-grown. Now, in unfamiliar territory, perhaps the territory of another pack, it would be natural for him to feel defensive when he first became aware of strangers, especially hostile strangers with spears. Why had the people of this Camp drawn spears?Ayla thought there was something familiar about the chant; then she realized what it was. The words were in the sacred archaic language that was understood only by the mamuti. Ayla didn't understand all of it, Mamut had just begun to teach her the language before she left, but she did gather that the meaning of the loud chant was essentially the same as the words that had been shouted earlier, though cast in somewhat more cajoling terms. It was an exhortation to the strange wolf and horse-people spirits to go away and leave them alone, to go back to the spirit world where they belonged.Speaking in Zelandonii so the people from the Camp wouldn't understand, Ayla told Jondalar what the mamut was saying."They think we're spirits? Of course?' he said. "I should have known. They're afraid of us. That's why they're threatening us with spears. Ayla, we may have this problem every time we meet people along the way. We are used to the animals now, but most people have never thought of horses wolves as anything but food or pelts," he said."The Mamutoi at the Summer Meeting were upset in the beginning. It took them a while to get used to the idea of having the horses and Wolf around, but they got over it," Ayla said."When I opened my eyes that first time in the cave in your valley and saw you helping Whinney give birth to Racer, I thought the lion had killed me and I had awakened in the spirit world," Jondalar said. "Maybe I should get down, too: and show them I am a man and not attached to Racer like some kind of man-horse spirit."Jondalar dismounted, but he held on to the rope attached to the halter he had made. Racer was tossing his head and trying to back away from the advancing mamut, who was still shaking the staff and chanting loudly. Whinney was behind the kneeling woman, with her head down, touching her. Ayla used neither ropes nor halters to guide her horse. She directed the horse entirely with the pressures of her legs and the movements of her body.Catching a few sounds of the strange language the spirits spoke, and seeing Jondalar dismount, the shaman chanted louder, pleading with the spirits to go away, promising them ceremonies, trying to placate them with offers of gifts."I think you should tell them who we are," Ayla said. "That mamut is getting very upset."Jondalar held the rope close to the stallion's head. Racer was alarmed and trying to rear, and the mamut with her staff and shouting didn't help. Even Whinney looked ready to spook, and she was usually much more even-tempered than her excitable offspring."We are not spirits,'' .Jondalar called out when the mamut paused for a breath. "I am a visitor, a traveler on a Journey, and she--he pointed toward Ayla--is Mamutoi, of the Mammoth Hearth."The people glanced at each other with questioning looks, and the mamut stopped shouting and dancing, but still shook the staff now and then while studying them. Maybe they were spirits who were playing tricks, but at least they had been made to speak in a language everyone could understand. Finally the mamut spoke."Why should we believe you? How do we know you are not trying to trick us? You say she is of the Mammoth Hearth, but where is her mark? She has no tattoo on her face."Ayla spoke up. "He didn't say I was a mamut. He said I was of the Mammoth Hearth. The old Mamut of the Lion Camp was teaching me before I left, but I am not fully trained."The mamut conferred with a man and a woman, then turned back. "This one," she said, nodding toward Jondalar. "he is as he says, a visitor. Though he speaks well enough, it is with the tones of a foreign tongue. You say you are Mamutoi, yet something about the way you speak is not Mamutoi."Jondalar caught his breath and waited. Ayla did have an unusual quality to her speech. There were certain sounds she could not quite make, and the way she said them was curiously unique. It was perfectly clear what she meant, and not unpleasant-he rather liked it-but it was noticeable. It wasn't quite like the accent of another language; it was more than that, and different. Yet it was just that: an accent, but of a language most people had not heard and would not even recognize as speech. Ayla spoke with the accent of the difficult, guttural, vocally limited language of the people who had taken in the young orphan girl and raised her."I was not born to the Mamutoi," Ayla said, still holding Wolf back, though his growl had ceased. "I was adopted by the Mammoth Hearth, by Mamut, himself."There was a flurry of conversation among the people, and another private consultation between the mamut and the woman and man."If you are not of the spirit world, how do you control that wolf and make horses take you on their backs?" the mamut asked, deciding to come right out with it."It's not hard to do if you find them when they are young," Ayla said."You make it sound so simple. There must be more to it than that." The woman couldn't fool a mamut, who was also of the Mammoth Hearth."I was there when she brought the wolf pup to the lodge,'' JondaLar tried to explain. "He was so young that he was still nursing, and I was sure he would die. But she fed him cut-up meat and broth, waking up in the middle of the night as you do with a baby. When he lived, and started to grow, everyone was surprised, but that was only the beginning. Later, she taught him to do what she wished-not to pass water or make messes inside the lodge, not to snap at the children even when they hurt him. If I hadn't been there, I would not have believed a wolf could be taught so much or would understand so much. It's true, you must do more than find them young. She cared for him like a child. She is a mother to that animal, that's why he does what she wants.""What about the horses?" the man who was standing beside the shaman asked. He'd been eyeing the spirited stallion, and the tall man who was controlling him."It is the same with the horses. You can teach them if you find them young and take care of them. It takes time and patience, but they will learn." Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Jean M. Auel’s enthralling Earth’s Children® series has become a literary phenomenon, beloved by readers around the world. In a brilliant novel as vividly authentic and entertaining as those that came before, Jean M. Auel returns us to the earliest days of humankind and to the captivating adventures of the courageous woman called Ayla. With her companion, Jondalar, Ayla sets out on her most dangerous and daring journey--away from the welcoming hearths of the Mammoth Hunters and into the unknown. Their odyssey spans a beautiful but sparsely populated and treacherous continent, the windswept grasslands of Ice Age Europe, casting the pair among strangers. Some will be intrigued by Ayla and Jondalar, with their many innovative skills, including the taming of wild horses and a wolf; others will avoid them, threatened by what they cannot understand; and some will threaten them. But Ayla, with no memory of her own people, and Jondalar, with a hunger to return to his, are impelled by their own deep drives to continue their trek across the spectacular heart of an unmapped world to find that place they can both call home.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(3K)
★★★★
25%
(1.3K)
★★★
15%
(752)
★★
7%
(351)
-7%
(-351)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

The best content from the last three volumes in the series probably would have yielded one entertaining book.

Having recently reread the first three volumes in the Earth's Children saga, I learned of the last three and ordered them all. Eagerly awaiting their arrival, I then read reviews. This volume was out of print, so I'm reading it last. Having started it, I've put it down, not because I already know what's going to happen, but because, as with the sequels, it is tedious. It seems unlikely that anyone would begin here, but many prior events are often revisited and descriptive material, concerning plants for example, is repetitive.
8 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

3.5 Stars . . . Of Fire, Hunting, and Healing

I still remember discovered "The Clan of the Cave Bear" while in high school. It was so fresh, so different, and I savored every page. Ayla remains one of my all-time favorite fictional characters because of her humility, curiosity, and perseverance. With the announcement of the series' conclusion this year, in book six, "The Land of Painted Caves," I decided it was time to get caught up.

"The Plains of Passage" picks up where "The Mammoth Hunters" left off. Ayla and Jondalar have parted with their friends and loved ones at the base of the towering glacier walls, and now they are headed west toward Jondalar's original tribal people in the region of modern-day France. They are accompanied by Ayla's horses and Wolf as they trek upstream, following the Donau River through Romania, Hungary, Austria, and so on. I've traveled in Europe and eastern Europe, and found this not only intriguing but impressive in detail and research. Yes, some readers may get bored with it, but Auel's commitment to getting these things right only adds to the richness and believability of this monumental series. The mammoth-mating scenes were strange--but also strangely beautiful and evocative. I felt like a time-traveler, transported to scenarios one could never imagine encountering in the past few millennia.

During their trip, Ayla continues to grow in her knowledge and confidence, particularly with medical skills, and Jondalar begins to let go of his prejudices and accept Ayla with all her uniqueness. They meet new and old friends. They encounter enemies, deal with male/female conflicts on a large scale, enjoy hot springs, and, of course, each other. (Auel's attention to her lovemaking scenes makes these books unsuitable for certain age groups.) In the course of their journeys, this intrepid and enterprising pair continue spreading the knowledge of fire, hunting, healing, of herbs and of sewing. Truly, we get a feel for the progression of humanity through the arc of the Earth's Children stories.

I have one more book to go to be ready for the finale, and though I've heard so-so responses to that fifth book, it's a necessary step in this overall passage. For those willing to savor the plants, foods, and scenery, Auel has created one of the most memorable series of our age.
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

If I read the word "node" one more time I might have wretched...

If you want to read a book about how female anatomy looks like pink/silkly/flowerly petals for 400 pages (along with how the Auel thinks the word "node" is apparently an attractive way to reference the [...]) please do buy this book.

You get a bonus 800 pages describing mammoth sex, plants and dirt formations.

The remaining thousand pages of this hideously long failure all deal with superwoman Ayla's ability to do everything perfectly. [...].

I only got through this book by skimming past entire chapters, which, I rarely do.
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Passage Repeats

So disappointed. It's just the same "passages" over and over and over.The only new additions to the story line were left undeveloped, or led back over the same old material, again and again.Spoiler Alert! All the rest of the books are just as much of a let down.I want my money back, and the beautiful story I had originally been told. Should have left good enough alone and not been greedy to publish more.
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

The Plains of Passage

The Plains of Passage is the fourth book in Auel's wonderful Earth's Children series. Unlike the others, I don't recommend that this one be read as a stand-alone. There is just too much background information and the series should be read in order. For those unfamiliar with the series (and this could be a possible spoiler) it revolves around Ayla, a little girl who was orphaned and raised by a clan of Neanderthals who took her in, taught her their ways and their sign language. When she is forced to leave the Clan and her son behind, she makes her way to a remote valley where she makes unlikely friends in the animals there and eventually, a tall handsome man who is on a journey from the West, Jondalar, discovers her there. They fall in love and make a small trip where they meet the Mamutoi people and they gain not only friends, but family as well in the meeting. However, Jondalar is anxious to return home and he and Ayla start back on a journey to the lands of the Zelandonii far to the west.

This book is about that journey. It starts shortly after they leave the summer gathering of the Mamutoi and start heading west to get back to the Great Mother River who they will follow all the way to the end in the West. Along the way they encounter several different types of people, some good and some bad, and learn their ways and make new friends. With them are Ayla's two horses and the wolf cub she has raised from a pup which causes both fear and admiration from the people along the way. Not all are so impressed however and it is up to Ayla to rescue Jondalar when he is captured and their future seems uncertain as to whether they will make it back to Jondalar's home.

The characters in this book are more rushed than they have been in the previous books. Ayla and Jondalar are a little too perfect and it makes them unbelievable and doesn't promote connectedness in their characters. The other people in the book are only mentioned briefly as they are on a journey that takes them away from everyone quickly and therefore don't have the richness that is seen in the Mamutoi tribe or Ayla's clan in the previous books.

The writing is very descriptive and while that's normally a plus in Auel's book, here it makes the reading very tedious. Since they are on a journey they pass through many lands and vegetation and Auel takes the time to describe ALL of it. But, on a better note, she actually has other people invent things instead of Ayla and Jondalar for once and this makes the book a little more believable than some instances in the previous three. Readers should be warned that there are several explicit sex scenes in this book (and the others) and Auel leaves nothing to the imagination in them. Some people may like this, others may not.

While its not my favorite book in the series and arguably not as good as the first three, I still enjoyed this continuation of Ayla and Jondalar's story. I would rate it about 3 1/2 stars as its not bad, but definitely not up to par with Auel's normal work.

Book 1: The Clan of the Cave Bear
Book 2: The Valley of Horses
Book 3: The Mammoth Hunters

The Plains of Passage
Copyright 1990
757 pages

Review by M. Reynard 2011
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

downward curve

In this series I felt each book has been better than the previous one...until Plains of Passage. I feel that the novelty of these characters and pets and wonderful inventions are beginning to wear thin. I don't want to read any more paragraphs that begin with Jondalar saying "Ayla, my Ayla!" and how she was the first, and only, woman that could 'take his all' (reference to the huge size of his 'manhood'). I did enjoy this book but it's becoming a bit hard not to poke fun at all the repeated sex scenes and wonderment from the different peoples that they encounter. I loved the first three books in this series but now everything seems to be repeating on itself. I liked the anti-racist tones of these novels but feel a little uncomfortable at the authors obvious admiration for people that mother-nature has made beautiful/tall/well endowed/blonde/naturally gifted etc. At first we rejoice in these things because Ayla and Jondalar were both given a tough time in previous novels, and we cheered them on. But now in Plains of Passage, they plod along doing the same things and the novelty's wearing thin. But still worth a read. (flip past any paragraphs beginning "Ayla, my Ayla")
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

For shame...

I loved the first three books, but the fourth book felt like a betrayal. To get my attention and interest and then offload a bunch of crap was a mean trick. If I want to read about animals and plants I certainly won't select a novel; Ms. Auel has a great deal of knowledge about this era, but I felt she was just showing off--and leaving her heroine in the dust.

I was ready to love Jondalar, but in book three he was revealed as a whiner, a coward and a heartbreaker. Then in book four he's a hero again? I don't buy it.

The story of Ayla held great promise, but I can't finish book four and I won't buy another.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

prehistoric road movie

this is perhaps the best of the earth's children series, a great road movie as jondalar and ayla move from the edge of the ice-caps down to the danube delta on the black sea and the follow the river all the way back to the dordogne. the pleasure is of course meeting the various peoples along the way, at least one of which are very strange, a kind of feminism gone bad, in which wolf is finally allowed to do his wolf thing. of course, some of the pleasure is the reversal of the trip jondalar and his brother took in the valley of horses. once again, auel's description of landscape, flora and fauna is the best part of the book, showing us that, despite the fictional story and ayla's super-woman abilities and the too-frequent sex, scenes i automatically skip over when rereading the books, this six-volume series is probably still the best description of our ancestors 30,000 years ago and the more-than-abundant world they inhabited. of course, the racist flathead issue remains at center. here recent research seems to undercut auel's story. it doesn't seem likely, tho possible, that the cro-magnons killed off the neanderthals, albeit their superior culture might very well have led to neanderthal extinction. recent genetic research seems to show that there was very little overlap, much less interaction, between the two types of homonids, tho the evidence is still being studied. it is well known how 19th-century french anthropology and archeology postulated a very germanophile notion of the cro-magnons as tall, blond, blue-eyed and the opposite of the far more simian neanderthals, one of the ideological notions that fed into the so-called scientific racism that became so virulent in the 20th century. auel uses this conflict to provide background for her story and ayla is of course as much neanderthal as anyone could be, given her unique story. but one of the main problems of prehistoric representation is the extrapolation of our own violence back into earlier times. we recognize that there were 'times of trouble' in prehistory, conflicts and destructions that arose between different ethnic groups, but the sort of genocide postulated in some quarters as the reason for the abrupt disappearance of the very successful neanderthal species in europe and the middle east after 200,000 years or more is surely more our problem than theirs. too many visions of the distant past, like quest for fire or 10,000 BC, envision a kind of southern california gangland setting with continual strife and murder. auel's great accomplishment is to show us, that while there was trouble at times, it was mostly intramural and didn't involve tribal warfare for the most part. and, while she is surely a kind of feminist, she is by no means rigid; her rather reasonable vision of the great mother goddess is temperate and quite possibly true as far as it goes, even if it's most famous advocate, robert graves, has been widely criticized over the years for fudging his scholarship and drawing overly quick conclusions from surmises that may or may not be true.
i have been rereading her books recently after buying the final one and wanting to reread the others. so far i have reread them all except the clan of the cave bear but will perhaps get to it in time. finally, if nothing else, auel's vision of neanderthals is wholly absorbing. the idea of total memories is fascinating, if unprovable; the winter-counts of native americans that go back to athapascans when they hadn't yet left siberia to cross over into alaska seem similar, as does the kind of dream-time of the australian aborigines.
in any case, auel is well worth reading, or even, in my case, rereading. and this travelogue, along with valley of horses, is perhaps one of the best of the lot.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Each book seems to bring the series downhill :(

Hmm, what did I like about this book? When Ayla and Jondalar met new groups of people because then at least you were introduced to new characters and there was a bit of life in the book and a break from the pages upon pages of descriptions of the landscape, how big Jondalar's manhood is, and how mammoths have sex. I also liked when Ayla and Jondalar met up with some Clan people and helped them out and Jondalar got to see a bit more of how they are real people.

Overall though this book dragged on and on and if I wasn't already reading the series I wouldn't have bothered to continue to the end of this book.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

no pleasures here

Jean Auel has done it again...written the same book for the fourth time.

I know books in a series usually begin with exposition detailing key developments from the preceding episodes, but come on. I KNOW how Ayla controls her horse with subtle body movements, I KNOW that shamans "speak with a shadow on the tongue", that Ayla believes babies come from a mans essence, and how she raised horses, wolves and lions. Yeah, yeah, you were marked by the cave lion, never knew your own people, and are terrified by earthquakes. We KNOW. So sorry you had a bad trip with Creb, Ayla, but do we need to hear about it every damn time you meet a new mog ur or mamutoi?

In fact I am 1/2 way through the book with little more than incidents repeated (often verbatim) from all the previous books. Ayla and Jondular are the party guests who just keep telling the same anecdotes over and over. The story might be interesting the 1st time but it gets old really fast.
2 people found this helpful