The Kin

by Peter Dickinson

Paperback, 1998

Status

Available

Call number

Fic SF Dickinson

Collections

Publication

New York : Firebird/Penguin, 2003, c1998.

Description

Juvenile Fiction. Juvenile Literature. Historical Fiction. HTML: Four children embark on a quest for a new land at the dawn of human history Africa, two hundred thousand years ago: Suth and Noli were orphaned the night the murderous strangers came, speaking an unfamiliar language and bringing violence to the peaceful Moonhawk tribe. Determined not to die in the desert, Suth and Noli slip away with Ko and Mana. Suth, the eldest, leads them; Noli's dreams of the future guide them. Ko gives them courage; Mana gives them peace. Their search for a new Good Place, one of food and safety, will take them across the valleys and plains of prehistoric Africa and bring them together as a tribe and as a family..

User reviews

LibraryThing member saucyhp
I know this isn't fair but I've read Jean M. Auel's series and I just found this too similar!
LibraryThing member BookshelfMonstrosity
After reading a few just so-so books, I really wanted to get lost in a great tome of a story. The Kin was just the ticket. The book is actually four novels published in one volume, weighing in at just over 600 pages. The story is paced really well, so I would look up from reading and realize I had
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just knocked out 50 or 75 pages in no time. I'm a huge history fan and have always been interested in the history of early mankind. Set in prehistoric Africa, this novel imagines what life was like for the clans of people surviving in the African deserts.

The stories of Suth, Noli, Po, and Mana are interspersed with Oldtales, or creation stories about the Kin's First Ones, which I found to be really interesting and illuminating as to how the characters behaved and reacted to life in the wild. Each First One is an animal, such as a monkey or a pocupine, and each Kin is named after a First One. The mixture of myth and history was just perfect and very entertaining.

A most interesting aspect of this book is how Dickinson imagined communication between speaking and non-speaking humans. The four children the stories follow belong to the Moonhawk Kin, which consists of highly verbal humans. Along the way, they encounter the Porcupine Kin, who are nonverbal but are still very communicative through sounds and gestures. Some of the Moonhawks say that the Porcupine Kin are not really 'people' because they can't speak words, but others, particularly Noli, are convinced that the Porcupine are just as human as anyone else even though they are different.

All in all, this novel is a very interesting and thought-provoking work of 'prehistorical' fiction.
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LibraryThing member texicanwife
A wonderful storyteller, Dickinson brings the dawn of human civilization to life!

A wonderful tale of a small group of talking individuals who survive numerous death-defying encounters, both with natural disaster and with other humans and animals!

It is also a tale of coming-of-age for these
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youngsters, at a time when they should still have had the freedom of childhood.

Reminscent of the Clan of the Cave Bear series, The Kin brings us details about post-Neanderthal man's life, and the imagination for us to view and feel it as well.

I couldn't put this one down!

I give it five stars! And my Thumbs Up award!
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LibraryThing member The_Hibernator
The Kin was originally written as a series of four short books, but it has been compiled into one book in later editions. It is set in Africa 200,000 years ago. A group of men has recently been ousted from their home by violent strangers, and they are wandering through the desert looking for new
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Good Places. When they abandon the four very young orphans for their own survival, two older children separate from the group and go back to rescue the little ones. This group of children then has many adventures and meets many strange people in these strange lands. Dickinson knows a lot about Africa and anthropology, making this story creative and interesting. I certainly recommend it to anyone who enjoys survival and prehistoric adventures for tweenagers.
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LibraryThing member Cheryl_in_CC_NV
Intended for children, but so rich, imaginative, intense, and satisfying I recommend it for all ages 10 to 110. A little bit like Clan of the Cave Bear, which I did like, but so much more. Fans of fantasy and science fiction will like it, too - the characters are humans but since they are of
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200,000 years ago they are almost 'alien.'
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LibraryThing member jjmcgaffey
Four excellent stories in one (though reading them all in a row, I got a little bit tired of the style by the end). A Stone Age story in which the protagonist(s) are _not_ the discoverers of fire, riding horses, and agriculture, how unusual! They do learn, and teach, new techniques, but they're
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sharing knowledge with other people, not producing discoveries themselves. A small band of people - smaller, for having been attacked by another group - wander into new areas, encounter some very different people, and expand their ways of living, just a little. Four stories, each with a different protagonist, all of whom are present in each story. The form of language is a little odd - reasonably, and quite intelligible, but that was part of what I got tired of. "I, Suth, say this...". A lot of interference from gods...or something. But it's all through people - warnings and suggestions, not direct interference (at least, in the "current" stories - a lot of direct interference in the Oldtales). I think a bit of reverse racism in the last story (if I'm interpreting "greyish, with a purple sheen" skin correctly). I'm very glad I (finally) read it, though I'm not sure if I'll bother to reread.
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Awards

Language

Original publication date

1998

ISBN

0142501204 / 9780142501207

Local notes

Kin, omnibus 1-4

DDC/MDS

Fic SF Dickinson

Rating

(36 ratings; 4.1)
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