Jean M. Auel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jean Marie Untinen-Auel
Born February 18, 1936 (1936-02-18) (age 72)
Chicago, Illinois (United States)
Pen name Jean M. Auel
Occupation Novelist
Nationality American
Writing period 1980 - present
Genres Pre-historical fiction
Notable work(s) Earth's Children series
Spouse(s) Ray Bernard Auel
Children 5

Jean Marie Auel, née Untinen (born February 18, 1936 in Chicago, Illinois) is an American writer. She is best known for her Earth's Children books, a series of historical fiction novels set in prehistoric Europe that explores interactions of Cro-Magnon people with Neanderthals. Her books have sold 34 million copies world-wide in many translations.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Author Jean Marie Auel (surname pronounced like "owl")[1] [2] was born in Chicago, Illinois, February 18, 1936, the second of five children of Neil Solomon Untinen, a housepainter, and Martha Wirtanen. She and her husband, Ray Bernard Auel, have five children and live in Portland, Oregon.

Auel has been a member of Mensa since 1964.[3] She attended Portland State University and the University of Portland. While studying, she worked as a clerk (1965-1966), a circuit board designer (1966-1973), technical writer (1973-1974), and a credit manager at Tektronix (1974-1976). At one time, she shared a secretary with author Ursula K. Le Guin.[citation needed] She earned an MBA in 1976 and has received honorary degrees from the University of Maine and Mount Vernon College for Women.

In 1977, Auel began extensive library research of the Ice Age for her first book. She joined a survival class to learn how to construct an ice cave, and learned primitive methods of making fire, tanning leather, and knapping stone from aboriginal skills expert Jim Riggs. Auel describes Riggs as "the kind of person you could put into one end of a wilderness naked, and he'd come out the other end fed, clothed, and sheltered." Clan of the Cave Bear was nominated for numerous literary awards, including an American Booksellers Association nomination for best first novel[4].

The Clan of the Cave Bear, 1980
The Clan of the Cave Bear, 1980

After the success of the first book, Auel was able to travel to prehistoric sites and to meet many of the experts with whom she had been corresponding. Her research has taken her across Europe from France to Ukraine, including most of what Marija Gimbutas called Old Europe. She has developed a close friendship with Dr. Jean Clottes of France who was responsible for, among many other things, the exploration of the Cosquer Cave discovered in 1985 and the Chauvet Cave discovered in 1994[5] [6].

Jean Auel's books have been commended for their anthropological authenticity and their ethnobotanical accuracy. However, recent archaeological research may suggest that some prehistorical details in the series are inaccurate and others fictional, and that specifications of prehistorical milestones are sometimes arbitrary and inconsistent. For example, the differences between Neanderthals and Homo sapiens may have been exaggerated or underestimated in the series; it has been found that Neanderthals had a hyoid bone and may thus have been capable of using vocal language and not as dependent on sign language as portrayed in the series (the existence of a Neanderthal hyoid bone wasn't confirmed until 1983, some years after the first book in the series was published).

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] Earth's children Series

  1. The Clan of the Cave Bear, 1980
  2. The Valley of Horses, 1982
  3. The Mammoth Hunters, 1985
  4. The Plains of Passage, 1990
  5. The Shelters of Stone, 2002

[edit] References

  1. ^ Literature Resource Center. Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. 14 March 2007 <http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/LitRC?locID=vol_m58c> (2004). "Jean M(arie) Auel," in Contemporary Authors. (A profile of the author's life and works), Detroit, MI : Gale. http://biblio.middlebury.edu/record=b1629219
  2. ^ The Jean Auel FAQ - brought to you by ECfans.com and The AuelPage!
  3. ^ "They're Accomplished, They're Famous, and They're MENSANS" (July 2004). Mensa Bulletin (476): p. 27. American Mensa. ISSN 0025-9543. 
  4. ^ Jean M. Auel :: Author Q&A
  5. ^ Jean M. Auel :: Video Interviews
  6. ^ "An Evening With Jean Auel"

[edit] External links