
Today, I am delighted to welcome the very talented author, Jacqui Murray, with her latest novel in the Savage Land Book series, Balance of Nature.
When I was a teenager, I read a few of Jean M. Auels novels about pre-historic humans. I loved them and I saw the movie. Now I am reading Jacqui Murray’s novels about pre-historic humans. Jacqui Murray’s books are even more fascinating and very realistic and well researched. This post is part of a Book Launch series for Balance of Nature held February 2-13, 2026. There is more information here.

Summary
A tribe haunted by the past. Lies that threaten the future. A reason to find the truth.
Savage Land is the third trilogy about prehistoric man in the series, Man. Vs. Nature. Savage Land explores how two bands of humans survived one of the worst natural disasters in Earth’s history, when volcanic eruptions darkened the sky, massive tsunamis crossed the ocean in crushing waves, and raging fires burned the land. Viral tribes of Neanderthals and early man considered themselves apex predators, but that crown belonged to Nature and she was intent on washing the two-legged blight from her lands.
In Balance of Nature, Book Three of the trilogy, Yu’ung’s Neanderthal tribe hopes to settle at Gibraltar but instead find unexpected threats and lethal challenges.
Follow the courageous Yu’ung, the determined Kazeb, the mystical Shanadar, and the pawed-and-clawed Canis as they navigate a perilous world of tribal conflict, unexplained visions, and shifting loyalties. Their journey is a testament to the resilience and strength of true leadership in a sweeping saga that ultimately leads to who we are today.
Book information:
Genre: Prehistoric fiction
Editor: Anneli Purchase
- To purchase the kindle version of the book, click here
- To purchase the paperback version of the book, click here

Balance of Nature trailer
Excerpt: Chapter 1
75,000 years ago
The area we now call Gibraltar
Shouts woke the brothers from their sleep.
“A boat—on the Endless Sea! Headed toward us!”
At night? How is that possible? But Kazeb didn’t ask because it didn’t matter. What mattered was that it was there.
He and Turk had waited long for this news, Kazeb with excitement, Turk with dread. Without discussion, they raced across the grassland, leapt over crevices, the width familiar even in the dark, and then scrambled up Big Rock’s knobby flank, grabbing tiny ledges with their fingers and toes with a speed mountain goats would envy. The behemoth’s height dwarfed all hills on the peninsula save the distant, towering range that separated it from others.
The brothers summited the crest and crouched behind a thick patch of scrub at the cliff’s edge. The brisk breeze atop the promontory whipped Kazeb’s hair around. He clenched his fists, gritted his teeth so tightly he should have broken a tooth, and waited for the vague elongated shadow on the water’s inky surface to reveal its intentions.
Is it them? He glanced at his brother’s square face. Turk thinks it is.
Sun’s steady arrival slowly erased the dark, made the sea shimmer in shades of blue as waves crashed against the coastline. Just below the surface, under the foam, were sharp shoals. Any boat must tediously avoid these, better yet, continue down the shore where there was no risk, unless they knew of the sole safe mooring used by natives and those they shared the location with, like they did with the Tall Ones from long ago.
Turk hissed, “It’s them, Liis.”
The Clan called him Liis, but he preferred “Kazeb,” the name awarded him when he agreed to guide the Tall One Fierce to the sea’s end. That was far beyond anywhere he had ever traveled, but Fierce claimed Kazeb’s knowledge of the area was invaluable.
“We can’t tell who is onboard, Turk,” he said, though who else knew of the hidden cove?
Kazeb rose and scanned a full circle, hoping whoever came on that craft wasn’t looking up here.
“What are you doing, Liis?”
“I need to see if they’re alone, or do more come from other directions.”
Flat grassland bordered one flank of the promontory, water the rest. Sun’s earliest rays colored the sky in pinks and blues. Birds plummeted into the crystalline water. Fish with no desire to be food dove. Farther away, pigs rooted through the stubble and a herd of deer feasted on ever-abundant fresh young shoots, protected by the range of mountains from unexpected predators.
When we finish, that’s where we will go.
He turned back to the shoreless sea. Visible on clear days, a faint brown outline shadowed the horizon, what the Tall One Fierce had called home.
Turk said, “They knew enough to stay in the calm waterswhen darkness arrived, to avoid the underwater shoals.”
Sun broke above the horizon, telling the boat it was safe to continue. The craft nimbly skirted the shoals, aiming for the spot a similar vessel had beached long ago. Kazeb gripped his spear tighter. Fierce had promised to return once his exploration was completed. Kazeb trusted his word, but the more time passed, the more he wondered if he had been lied to.
“Liis!” Turk interrupted his reverie. “There is another boat, behind the first!”
Now Kazeb saw it. Both prows plowed through the water, their shapes clear in the sunlight. Shivers ran through Kazeb.
These aren’t like Fierce’s craft … but we have seen no one from that direction either by sea or foot.
Kazeb studied the gaggle of Uprights, their bold stripes, the confident stance of the slender male in the bow of the front boat. All fit his recollections of the Tall One band. His gaze drifted to the back boat, a shorter stockier figure at the prow.
Is he Fierce’s guide? My replacement? But why would he be behind Fierce?
Legs wide for balance, sunlight glinting off flame-red hair, the sturdy figure scanned the Big Rock. To Kazeb’s surprise, his gaze paused at the clump of brush where the brothers hid. He couldn’t see them, of course. Both had mudded their skin and squinted to keep Sun’s glare off their eyes. Still, the figure shouted to One-who-might-be-Fierce and pointed.
Turk gurgled, “Are they looking for us? But why come back here, considering what they did?”
“We don’t know for sure—”
“Who else would it be?” Turk’s voice a strangled yelp.
They argued this question often. The Clan Healer originally thought the deadly illness had been caused by insects or a toxin in the air, but before he died, he admitted an individual could have poisoned the members’ food and water. Who could say?
Kazeb didn’t bother to reply, busy admiring the vessel’s sleek profile, so unlike the Clan’s flatter, smaller ones. The sailors effortlessly beached it at the base of the monstrous rock where the brothers hid.
Voice fiery, Turk hissed, “Our destiny has arrived, why we survive and the rest died.”
Author Bio

Jacqui Murray is the author of the popular prehistoric fiction saga, Man vs. Nature which explores seminal events in man’s evolution one trilogy at a time. She is also author of the Rowe-Delamagente thrillers and Building a Midshipman , the story of her daughter’s journey from high school to United States Naval Academy. Her non-fiction includes 100+ books on tech into education, and a freelance journalist on tech ed topics.
Author’s Social Media Contacts
Click on the links below to visit the author’s media
What should I do about AI?

This is a bonus section about AI provided by Jacqui Murray
In 2024, readers crave more than just a passive experience. Interactive storytelling has become a significant trend, allowing readers to actively participate in shaping the narrative. With the use of augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR), stories are no longer confined to the pages of a book. Authors are experimenting with immersive experiences, creating narratives that respond to reader choices, making each journey through the story a unique adventure. Here are a few quick guidelines:
- Use AI as an assistant, not as a replacement
- Check everything AI does. It’s not perfect. Don’t expect it to be something it isn’t.
- Be legal and ethical in your AI use. Confess to its use (like in your Kindle publications) when necessary. Don’t try to hide it.
- Protect your privacy–don’t share personal information.
- Assume AI-generated images can now be reverse-searched and tied back to you in some cases.
- Voice cloning only needs 5–30 seconds of audio—don’t post long clear voice notes publicly if you’re worried about impersonation.

Apt comparison to Jean M. Auel, Thomas. I remember reading The Clan of the Cave Bear and The Mammoth Hunters. I’ve been trying to visit all of Jacqui’s stops on her blog tour. She’s stopping off at my blog next week.
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When I read about paleoanthropologists (the scientists who study ancient humans), many reference Auel as their inspiration. Me, too!
See you soon, Pete!
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“paleoanthropologists” I learned a new word today. It is fabulous that you are keeping it so real. I love your books. Thank you so much Jacqui.
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Yes I’ve read those books too as well as 7-8 of Jacqui’s. I am just starting this one. I am looking forward to reading the post on your blog next week. Thank you so much Pete.
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The trailer is awesome! Thanks for being part of Jacqui’s tour.
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Thanks, Darlene. The connection to our dog predecessors makes my visit with Thomas especially poignant.
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Thank you so much Jacqui for saying that and I love when you put canines in your books.
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Thank you so much Darlene I love the trailer too and it is a lot fun being part of her tour.
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Thomas, lovely to see Jacqui here on her tour! The except here is gripping and the video trailer is fantastic – the music a perfect match for the thrilling description of the book. As to AI tips hard to believe that 5 seconds audio is enough to clone a voice. Personally not worried but no wonder there is so much concern.
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That fact has changed the way I answer the phone from unknown callers. It’s too dangerous!
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Yes that is what I’ve read too
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My husband and I just talked about answering the phone. He said don’t say “yes” to the person on the phone. They could use the “yes” illegally. I usualy say “speaking” if someone wants to talk to me.
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I’ve read about the “yes” thing too. Saying “speaking” instead seems like a good response. I’ll try that if I need to answer someone. However, I avoid answering if I don’t recognize the number. If it is important they can leave a message.
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I don’t answer either if I don’t recognize the number. I press “screen call” if the phone is by me. My phone is good at detecting spam.
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Yes same here and it says “Spam Risk”
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Thank you so much Annika. I totally agree with you and the video trailer is fantastic like you say. I love the picture towards the end with the canine standing and looking at us and there’s reddish bright sky in the background. I agree about AI too. That 5 seconds of audio is enough to clone a voice is a bit scary. I’ve read that if someone totally unknown call you and asks you odd questions, don’t answer, don’t give them the opportunity to use your voice.
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Terrific post in support of Jacqui’s new book Thomas… great content. xx
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Thanks, Sally. I wanted to add a little difference to each stop on the tour, with the topical posts. I’m glad you liked it.
Still having a great visit with your community. What a group you have!
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A lot of time and effort has gone into each or your posts Jacqui and yes I am so lucky to be part of such an amazing community.. ♥
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Sally, you are so nice to everyone. Thank you so much for that.
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Thank you so much Sally and thank you for mentioning it on Facebook too.
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Jacqui Murray makes her Early Man characters seem like people we could easily relate to. Once we get past the idea that they are just “cavemen,” we are drawn into their relationships and their goals and problems just like in any other modern-day story, but their goals are much less trivial than ours. Often they face life and death decisions, drawing on strengths that we could never manage to achieve with our weak modern-day bodies. It all makes for fascinating reading.
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I love hearing that, Anneli. Thank you.
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That is a very good observation. Early man was of course feeling and thinking beings like we are and Jacqui is really able to make us relate to them, like you say. I have a lot of Neanderthal genes according 23AndMe (99 percentile) so I should try relate, I guess, and I really feel Jacqui’s books do that for me, as well as, with the prehistoric canines she typically feature in her books. I love dogs.
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The dogs are a special touch. They can be protectors, intimidators, hunters, and bed warmers. The perfect animal.
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Yes you are right. The canines in Jacqui’s books are amazing and yet pretty realistic. Our Bronco was a protector, he saved our pugs life, he found and rescued runaway hamsters, he intimidated intruders, he smelled out an oncoming insulin seizure, etc. Dogs can do things like that.
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I believe it. Our Emma is an English cocker spaniel and is so smart, yet loving too. A teddy bear in the house and a wolverine in the field.
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Dogs are amazing. Emma sounds like a really great dog. Smart and loving is a wonderful combo. Our mini-Australian Shepherd Rollo is a smart and funny little guy.
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They sure enrich our lives.
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Yes they certainly do
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It’s good to see Jacqui’s new book here, Thomas. It’s a great read!
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Thank you so much for weighing in, Priscilla.
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I am just getting started. It is great that you already into it (or finished). Thank you so much Priscilla.
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Thank you for hosting me, Thomas, and for bringing your dogs! I love getting to know them!
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It is a great pleasure to be part of your book tour. Thank you so much for including me Jacqui.
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I have been waiting for this book with baited breath! Jacqui, are you going to release this as an audio book? 🙂
This is a wonderful post about Jacqui’s new book! Great job, Thomas!
Congratulations, Jacqui!
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As soon as KDP allows, I will. I expect that any day. I use their AI so not the best but pretty good. Thanks, Kymber!
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Thank you so much for your very kind words Kymber. It is a great pleasure to be part of this book tour.
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Java Bean: “Ayyy, that sounds like good advice from Jacquie! Although since our Dada already wrote a six-part post about being in the hospital with an aneurysm, it’s probably too late for him not to share too much personal information.”Lulu: “He says that was different because it was a public service, whatever that means.”
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Hehe!
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I remember that Java Bean and Lulu. What a scary experience. It happened to my uncle and he died suddently while walking his dog. I feel so sorry for the dog, and him and his wife. Public service announcement mean that it is information that useful for many, and your Dada’s information is very important. We need to know about the danger.
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It’s funny, I have met many people who have a relative or friend who had one and passed away, but a vanishingly small number of people who know someone who had one and survived. The odds of making it are roughly 50/50 (or I guess 60/40 these days with improved treatments) but obviously the impact of being on the wrong side of that split is much bigger …
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Yes you are right. It is not just my uncle but we had a neighbor who passed away from an aneurysm too, but I don’t know anyone who survived. Perhaps people who survive don’t talk about it as much as surviving family members do when someone dies. I don’t know. But this is certainly something very dangerous that people should know about.
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That’s probably true, unless you’re me (or Emilia Clarke) and then you talk about it all the time. 😁
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Wow I did not know that Emilia Clarke had two brain aneurysms while filming Game of Thrones. Two brain aneurysms and still alive. That is amazing.
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Yep, and she suffered a brief spell of aphasia, which is definitely problematic when you have to talk for a living. Fortunately she recovered well and is still here to draw attention (and funding) to it. 🙂
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Wow aphasia, yes I agree that is not a condition that an actor would want. It is amazing that she got through it.
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What a wonderful review, Thomas! Thank you for hosting Jacqui’s latest interesting book.
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Let me know what Wilson thinks of his paleo-ancestors!
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As long as they don’t resemble squirrels, he’ll be good with the ancient ones. 😉
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Thank you so much for your kind words Tails Around the Ranch.
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Thanks for hosting, Jacqui, Thomas. Wishing here great success and congratulations.
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Thanks so much, John!
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😊
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Thank you so much John. It is really exciting being part of the tour.
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😊
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Thanks for promoting Jacqui’s book. She’s one of the hardest working authors around. Now I need to learn more about Leonbergers. They look to be delightful dogs.
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Thank you so much Jeff. I certainly agree with you. Jacqui is so productive and hard working. Leonbergers are related to Saint Bernards but less common. However, they are great family dogs who love to protect smaller dogs, and they have a very interesting but intense history. For example, they were used to pull cannons and ammunition carts in World War I, and almost went extinct (the Germans ran out of horses).
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I fell in love with Leonbergers through Thomas and quickly realized they required more attention than I could give. Again, thanks to Thomas. They are very special.
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Thank you so much for your very kind words Jacqui.
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It’s wonderful to see Jacqui’s fascinating book posted here in her blog tour, Thomas.
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Thanks, Thomas.
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Thank you so much Jacqui, for allowing me to be part of your tour.
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Thank you so much for your kind words T.W. Dittmer
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You’re welcome, Thomas. 😊
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The trailer is fantastic and captivating. Thank you for hosting Jacqui’s book tour, Thomas.
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Thank you so much Miriam. I agree with you, it is a great trailer.
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And thank you for dropping by, Miriam!
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Hi Thomas,
I love how you compared Jacqui’s books to Jean M. Auels novels about pre-historic humans and found and enjoyed them. You did a great job on Jacqui’s book and the neanderthals are so lovable. Thanks for sharing it with us! xx
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Thank you so much for your very kind words Cindy. It is great fun to be part of the book blast.
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You’re so very welcome, Thomas. I bet.. in my dreams i have time and so appreciate those that did them for me.. xx
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Thomas is a good reviewer. I love when he agrees to share my books on his blog.
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Yes, he is and a great writer, blogger and human like you!!!
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That is so very kind of you to say Cindy. Thank you.
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Thank you so much for your kind words Jacqui
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That is a gripping excerpt from a talented author’s book. A bonus for me is that I also get to visit your blog. Thx for hosting Jacqui!
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Thanks, Ankur. This is a long trip for you, from India!
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Thank you so much for visiting my blog Ankur and I agree with you, it is a gripping excerpt from Jacqui’s book.
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sounds like a good read! I’ve never really read a book like this one! I’ll check it out for sure!
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It’s more along the lines of survivalist books than most historical fiction. Life was tough back then!
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Yes it is certainly a good read, very exciting, and a lot of fun. Thank you Caroll Anne for checking it out.
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Great review, Thomas! I look forward to reading and reviewing it.
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Thank you so much Dawn. I am very much looking forward to your review. I have to finish and write a review as well.
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Thanks, Dawn. Thomas made me feel very welcome. I appreciate you dropping by!
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