I know I'm not alone on here in loving books and the more you read, the more 'taste' you acquire, but, looking back on your reading 'career', there's generally at least one book - or several as the Discworld World Cup bears out,
I can bang on about Middle Earth elsewhere right now, but two other sci-fi/fantasy authors blew me away a few years before I discovered Pterry, both written by women and both dealing in prehistory amongst other things. So thread starters perks, because I know 2 other people on here enjoy Julian May (yes she's a lady!
The other series is still being written by Jean Auel, Earth's Children. That started very strongly indeed and the first 2 books The Clan of the Cave Bear and The Valley of Horses were amazing reading because of the masterly research on the palaeolithic era of human history about a young female homo sapiens/cro magnon who has been orphaned and gets adopted into a neanderthal (homo neanderthalis) community. I'm not so fond of the later books in the series (the 6th and last one is due out sometime this year) as the orphan heroine, Ayla has turned into bloody wonder woman and is good at every sodding thing,
The Foreword and Acknowledgements of Auel's series are fascinating in themselves and the detailed academic archaeological and scientic research she undertakes for each book is staggering. Creb, the real person lived in a part of Turkey near Istanbul between 25-30,000 years ago - the limbs of his skeleton bore signs of several disabilities from birth defects, injury and/or arthritis and he had had his skull damaged around one of his eyes. The amazing thing about him was that his remains were the oldest of the other people found in the same cave - over 35 yrs old, which was an advanced age for a neanderthal and with his physical deformities would have needed the help of an effective and caring community to survive so long in newly post-glacial Asia Minor just in environmental terms - quite a different view of the grunting speechless cavemen image we were taught about in school...
So - those are 2 authors who socked it to me in one way or another. Who 'did it' for you?



