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The Tusks of Extinction
The Tusks of Extinction | Ray Nayler
11 posts | 13 read | 1 reading | 9 to read
When you bring back a long-extinct species, theres more to success than the DNA. Moscow has resurrected the mammoth, but someone must teach them how to be mammoths, or they are doomed to die out, again. The late Dr. Damira Khismatullina, the worlds foremost expert in elephant behavior, is called in to help. While she was murdered a year ago, her digitized consciousness is uploaded into the brain of a mammoth. Can she help the magnificent creatures fend off poachers long enough for their species to take hold? And will she ever discover the real reason they were brought back? A tense eco-thriller from a new master of the genre.
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review
TieDyeDude
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Mehso-so

An interesting story. There are four different storylines in 100 pages. While they all converged and concluded well, it felt like too much. Just when I got invested in one story, it switched to another. I don't think it would have benefitted from being longer (it told the story it wanted to), but it would have been better if it was more focused on fewer characters or connected the characters more directly.

shanaqui I had the same quibble with The Mountain in the Sea; Nayler's stories would be more satisfying if they were just a bit... tighter to a small number of characters. In The Mountain in the Sea, one character feels pretty much narratively wasted, despite the other storylines being pretty amazing. 18h
51 likes1 stack add1 comment
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MarshmallowAdventures
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Pickpick

A surprisingly satisfying little book, it tackled several interesting issues with the large scale problems of the ivory trade and human greed at the center of it all. I almost wish it were longer, but it gains some of its charm from being succinct.

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WildAlaskaBibliophile
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Sippin' on gin and juice. Laid back, with my mind on my book and my book on my mind!

Jess861 Curious about what you think of this book so far? 2w
WildAlaskaBibliophile @Jess861 it's good so far. Of course, there is the murder of elephants and mammoths, which is difficult for me. I always look up movies on Does the Dog Die website before watching them; just shows how difficult animal death and cruelty is for me. 2w
Jess861 @WildAlaskaBibliophile - thank you! I can't read about animal deaths if it is graphic. I can handle it if it adds to the story and is just sad but I still don't like it! 2w
WildAlaskaBibliophile @Jess861 Same! It doesn't go into graphic detail of the poachings, more of the aftermath where people and elephants/mammoths come across the remains. Some detail there. Still upsetting but not nearly as much as it would be if the author had detailed the physical aspect of the poaching. (edited) 2w
45 likes1 stack add4 comments
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WildAlaskaBibliophile
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“Damira followed the blood down the hill.“ #FirstLineFridays @ShyBookOwl

review
Soubhiville
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Pickpick

Nayler‘s pro-animal scifi with heavy environmental themes speaks to me!

This 100 page novella is fast paced and is about Wooly Mammoths that have been cloned from ancient DNA. And the ability to implant digitally saved human minds into new bodies.

I didn‘t love this as much as The Mountain in the Sea, but I tend to enjoy full novels more than novellas in general.

Pictured is Sietje at work allowing a puppy to share her bed- uncommon!

AlaMich Sweet photo! (edited) 1mo
AmyG For a minute I thought you got another dog. Good girl, Seitje! 1mo
Soubhiville @AmyG Haha, oh no, we are a one dog household. And two cats 😂. 1mo
MemoirsForMe I thought you added to your fur baby family too. Such a sweet photo! 😍 1mo
Hooked_on_books That‘s so nice of her to share her bed! 1mo
76 likes3 stack adds5 comments
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Schnoebs
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Pickpick

3.75⭐️

Though I wasn‘t in love with, I absolutely wish I had someone to talk about this book with. Highly recommend for any #bookclub. It‘s been a while that a sci-fi has really made me think. It‘s truly what I love about the genre. Never thought I‘d read such an interesting approach to discussing the ivory trade and poaching issue.

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reading.rainb0w
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Pickpick

A tale of revenge
With a science fiction twist
Don't mess with the Tusks
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

This short novella definitely made up for the less than savory finish of my last read.
🦣

#haikureview
#novella
#sciencefiction

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Decalino
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Pickpick

This brief, powerful novella by Ray Nayler, author of The Mountain in the Sea, depicts one woman's doomed efforts to save wild elephants, and how her unique knowledge and understanding is applied long after her death in an attempt to bring mammoths back from extinction in Siberia. Deftly written, this story would make a particularly haunting Black Mirror episode. A one sitting read for me, and not one that will be easily forgotten.

22 likes2 stack adds
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shanaqui
Pickpick

Received a copy to review!

I really wasn't sure about this concept when I read the blurb, but saw people enthusing about it and decided to give it a try anyway. It sounded, I don't know, kinda goofy from what I first read about it; I don't know what I was picturing exactly -- but no, it's very serious, and a very emotional story. I think each thread of it is handled well.

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TorieStorieS
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Pickpick

This speculative fiction quick listen definitely rings with some frightening authenticity at times. Across multiple future timelines, African elephants have become extinct, but mammoths have been recreated to once again roam Siberia. It‘s an interesting listen but one that I think I would have preferred to read because of some of the transitions between perspectives. A definite discussion starter— and I appreciate the research and references used!

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rachelsbrittain
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Pickpick

Mammoths are brought back from extinction-- but after humans have already hunted elephants to the point that they only exist in captivity, will wild mammoths really be able to survive, much less thrive? I really enjoyed Nayler's new books which focuses on mammoths and poachers instead of octopuses and fishing. It's shorter and not as mysterious, but just as good.

Soubhiville Oooooo, I didn‘t know anything about this! Into the TBR it goes! Thanks. 2y
47 likes4 stack adds1 comment