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- <text id=90TT2781>
- <title>
- Oct. 22, 1990: Queen Of The Ice Age Romance
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Oct. 22, 1990 The New Jazz Age
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 88
- Queen of the Ice Age Romance
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The best-selling adventures of Ayla and Jondalar continue in
- Jean Auel's latest epic
- </p>
- <p>By MARGOT HORNBLOWER/MONTIGNAC
- </p>
- <p> In the musty chill of the Dordogne, 30 ft. below ground,
- giant bulls, painted in red and black, gallop across undulating
- walls. Nearby, a cavalcade of horses, ibex, tiny deer and cave
- lions dances along the curves of rough limestone. Are these
- soaring images sacred or profane? A large bespectacled woman
- closes her eyes and sighs in wonder. She imagines a time,
- perhaps 20,000 years ago, when rituals were performed in this
- same hidden cave in the flickering light of animal-fat lamps.
- Slowly, tears stream down her cheeks. "It's like a church," she
- whispers. "You feel you can understand the people who painted
- this."
- </p>
- <p> Few have tried harder than Jean Auel, the Oregon chronicler
- of Ice Age romance, to fathom the mysteries of Cro-Magnon life.
- From her 1980 best seller, The Clan of the Cave Bear, through
- three popular sequels, including the just-published The Plains
- of Passage, Auel has fleshed out the stone-and-bone discoveries
- of archaeology to create a fully realized world for her
- prehistoric heroine, Ayla. In the latest 757-page volume, Ayla
- sets forth from her home among the Mammoth Hunters of the
- Eurasian steppes and, braving blizzards, a locust swarm and a
- fall into a glacier crevasse, reaches what is now the Dordogne,
- in southwest France. The region harbors a rich trove of Upper
- Paleolithic remains, including the mystically painted caverns.
- The Lascaux cave "overwhelms me," Auel says. "These weren't
- dumb savages."
- </p>
- <p> Prehistory is not only Auel's passion: it has proved
- improbably profitable. A former credit manager at a Portland
- electronics firm, the mother of five, then 40, had never
- written a word of fiction when the idea for an Ice Age epic
- popped into her head in 1977. From an outline scribbled at the
- kitchen table grew a publishing phenomenon. The first three
- books have sold more than 20 million copies worldwide and have
- been translated into 18 languages. The Plains of Passage,
- Auel's first book since 1985, has a 1.4 million-copy advance
- sale. Crown Publishers has reportedly paid Auel about $25
- million for Plains and two yet-to-be-written volumes completing
- the saga.
- </p>
- <p> The further escapades of Ayla and her blond boyfriend,
- Jondalar the toolmaker, are set in the Dordogne, where Auel has
- been exploring caves and sifting dirt on an archaeological dig.
- "I found some pieces of flint and a reindeer milk tooth," she
- says proudly, as she huffs up a path to an Ice Age rock
- shelter. Far below, a narrow valley is bathed in mist. On a
- forested bluff, a medieval fortress glows in pale yellow light.
- "The vegetation was different then," she says. "But I need to
- know the lay of the land, where the ridges are, where the high
- points are, so I can move my characters through here."
- </p>
- <p> A few days later, a French archaeologist guides Auel through
- Laugerie Haute, a vast excavation site under a cliff. She asks
- for details about how hearths were spaced, seeking hints on how
- families may have guarded their privacy. "This will be
- Jondalar's apartment building," she says. At Font-de-Gaume, a
- grotto of magnificent prehistoric artwork, she examines a
- painting of a wolf: "I have a feeling this will be Ayla's
- cave." It fits, since the adventurer travels with a wolf,
- albeit one she has trained to behave uncannily like a golden
- retriever.
- </p>
- <p> Auel gets passing grades from archaeologists on how she
- interprets the facts. "We can tell you how the paintings were
- made, but not why," says American archaeologist Roy Larick.
- "Jean does as good a job at speculating as anyone else." Where
- knowledge falls short, ideology takes over. An ardent feminist,
- Auel makes a case for a matriarchal Cro-Magnon society, basing
- her theory on Upper Paleolithic female fertility figures known
- as Venuses. These statuettes with exaggerated breasts and
- buttocks have been found by the hundreds, whereas no male
- sexual symbols have been uncovered. "I'm trying to psych out
- an entire culture when all we have are bits and pieces to go
- on," she says. But of one thing she's sure: "It's wrong to
- think of our ancestors bopping women over the head and dragging
- them by the hair. Anthropologists have found that most
- hunter-gatherer societies are very equal."
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, Ayla is a stereotyped wonderwoman: she stops
- a cave lion's attack with the wave of her hand, learns
- languages in minutes and uses birth control before anyone else
- even knows how babies are conceived. In The Clan of the Cave
- Bear, fact and fiction were plausibly balanced. But Plains
- verges on the ludicrous as Ayla expounds on clitoral vs.
- vaginal orgasm and rescues Jondalar from man-hating Amazons.
- And much of Plains reads like a textbook: page after page
- listing animals and plants. The archaeology may be accurate, but
- stilted dialogue and "his-loins-ached-with-need" sex scenes
- are alternately hilarious and pathetic.
- </p>
- <p> By and large, Auel has succeeded in popularizing a
- misperceived period. Nonetheless, even she may sense that her
- prehistoric cash cow may be overmilked. "Ayla's good company,
- but after a while you want to write about something else," she
- says. Then Auel is likely to make an important discovery of her
- own: whether her fans will remain loyal once the glaciers
- recede.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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