In the Morning of Time by Sir Charles G. D. Roberts

(12 User reviews)   3391
By Mason Ward Posted on May 7, 2026
In Category - Essential Reads
Roberts, Charles G. D., Sir, 1860-1943 Roberts, Charles G. D., Sir, 1860-1943
English
Ever wonder what it felt like to stand at the edge of a world that hadn't been fully explored yet? ‘In the Morning of Time’ by Sir Charles G. D. Roberts isn't your typical history book—it's a wild, sweeping imagination of Earth in its earliest days, before humans even showed up. Imagine dinosaurs so big they shook the ground, strange creatures unlike anything around today, and landscapes that go from steaming jungles to frozen tundra. Roberts, a master of storytelling (and the guy who basically invented the animal story as we know it), takes you back millions of years to watch this world unfold. No boring lectures here. Instead, you get to watch giant sloths plod along, pterodactyls screeching overhead, and a young Earth slowly shaping into our home. There’s this major question that runs through the whole book: what arrives first, and why? Some basic rules of nature get explored. Why do creatures take certain shapes—to hunt or hide? Why do some survive while others vanish forever? It’s not a story with people in it—more like a nature documentary in super-dramatic, old-school novel form. So if you love myths about lost worlds or just want to know what scientists used to think the prehistoric age looked like (around the time the 1900s were getting rollin’), you’re in some memorable narrative territory full of chilling and beautiful scenes.
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When someone says ‘prehistoric novel,’ most folks think of tiny people dealing with angry dinosaurs. But In the Morning of Time goes bigger—it’s a tribute to Earth’s early creatures before any heroes had tales to fuss over. Sir Charles G. D. Roberts makes the planet itself the main character.

The Story

Picture it: long before any humans, a stirring planet grows ancient forests, massive reptiles, and weird mammals. Roberts imagined the shaping of Earth and its life starting with the very first monsters and animals before evolving to something cold and empty. Without using these beasts as a background story, the author captures the main shape of animal life better with each era. The narrative sidesteps people and simply looks at the earth resting through massive changes—an enormous fight of quick, lizard things over huge wing threats.

Why You Should Read It

I love how this book doesn’t flinch at grandeur. The Cro-Magnons and saber-toothed sets come through—even more striking because in the 1913 original, writers thought far less deeply about dinosaurs than these representations. There's a frank feeling for hunger toward knowledge; animals are little survivors dying better with never-quit spirit. The scary notion that ice ages bring, that fits all perfectly there.

Roberts teases these hard pressures: being slow, sleep and early challenges, these creatures never stop for nonsense. They only fear, run—or kill the reasons they beat. The biggest shift emerges with fire and flint humans meeting survival run down—where community sparks.

Final Verdict

If you wholeheartedly adore books like Raptor Red by Robert Bakker... no offense but outside nature types usually skips poetry like in everything The Lost World by Arthur Conan Doyle short-dashing thriller—has that exactness but is pure Earth love-share wonderment. If your reading tracks scenes at river past—made but big—stronger—dramarising self before phones simply touched through whole primal hunger—storytelling slogs, grand! Suits sci fi oldists who grinned wonder by BBCs super wild era, painting ultimate sweeps crisp in turn.



⚖️ Public Domain Notice

This masterpiece is free from copyright limitations. Feel free to use it for personal or commercial purposes.

Jennifer Lee
9 months ago

The clarity of the concluding remarks is very professional.

Richard White
1 year ago

While browsing through various academic sources, the data points used to support the main thesis are quite robust. This exceeded my expectations in almost every way.

William Thomas
7 months ago

As a professional in this niche, the visual layout and supporting data make the reading experience very smooth. This has become my go-to guide for this specific topic.

Christopher Harris
10 months ago

After a thorough walkthrough of the table of contents, the practical checklists included are a great touch for real-world use. An excellent example of how quality digital books should be formatted.

John Jackson
5 months ago

Initially, I was looking for a specific answer, but it manages to maintain a consistent flow even when discussing difficult topics. Top-tier content that deserves more recognition.

5
5 out of 5 (12 User reviews )

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