Prehistoric fiction
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2017) |
Prehistoric fiction is a literary genre in which the story is set in the period of time prior to the existence of written record, known as prehistory.[1] As a fictional genre, the realistic description of the subject varies, without necessarily a commitment to develop an objective anthropological account.
List of prehistoric fiction
- The Animal Wife
- Bending the Boyne
- Born of the Sun
- The Clan of the Cave Bear
- Dael and the Painted People
- Dance of the Tiger
- Ember of a New World
- The Flint Lord
- The Forbidden Mountain
- The Gathering Night
- The Golden Strangers
- The Inheritors
- Ki'ti's Story, 75,000 BC Book One of Winds of Change
- Manak-na's Story, 75,000 BC Book Two of Winds of Change
- Mists of Dawn
- Moon Lord — Fall of King Arthur, Ruin of Stonehenge
- The People That Time Forgot
- Out of Time's Abyss
- Priestess of Henge
- The Quest for Fire
- Raptor Red
- Reindeer Moon
- The Scorpion God (two of its three short stories are set in pre-history)
- Stone Lord — Legend of King Arthur, the Era of Stonehenge
- Stonehenge
- The Story of Ab
- A Story of the Stone Age
- Tuksook's Story, 35,000 BC Book Four of Winds of Change
- Warrior's Moon
- Zamimolo's Story, 50,000 BC Book Three of Winds of Change
- Zan-Gah: A Prehistoric Adventure
- Zan-Gah and the Beautiful Country