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8 Reviews
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
VERY Interesting...,
This review is from: Ivory: A Legend of Past and Future (Hardcover)
Okay. This book takes you for a ride. In a way,It's remenisent of the "Star Wars" books because of all the wierd alien species. In other ways it reminded me of "the Fifth Element", though I have no particular reason why. The only reason I didn't give this book a 10 is because Its jumping around from present to future gets confusing and repetitive. I noticed that Amazon.com doesn't have a description of Ivory. Well, here's one for you: "It is the year 6303 of the Galactic Era, and Duncan Rojas, Senior Reasear -cher and authinticator for Braxton's Records of Big Game,has recieved a most unusual visitor. He is Bukoba Mandaka-the last of the Maasai. He searches for Malima Temboz,the Mount- ain that walks...known to the world as the Kilamanjaro Elephant.His bones are but dust. His spirit remains, restless and incomplete-his spirit, and somewhere in the vast reaches of the Galaxy, his tusks..." " Bukoba Mandaka must find those tusks, and find them soon. Rojas can- not resist the challenge. And the quest soon becaomes his own,as he begins to catch a glimpse of the elusive power of ancient Africa and the magic surrounding the greatest hunting tropy ever taken." That about wraps the book up. It's a VERY good book;recieving praise from Analog,the Cincinnati Post, Publishers Weekly, Library Journal, Locus, and the L.A. Times. Analog says: "A marvolous satisfying SF novel...A definite 'Don't miss!'" L.A. Times says: "Thought-provoking, imaginative,mordantly funny, and-above all-galactically grand." - Karli L., Raptor Girl
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Breaking out of the ghetto,
By
This review is from: Ivory: A Legend of Past and Future (Paperback)
Sci-fi's ghettoization is a well-known and discussed problem. Often that ghettoization is because of the characterization - or lack thereof. Concentrating on plot and splendid worlds is great for fans - but makes the work inaccessible to others.
_Ivory: A Legend of Past and Future_ does not have this flaw. Do not take me wrongly - this novel sweeps across time and space, flashing from the past to the far-flung future light-years away. Both the grandeur and the skill with which these worlds and societies are painted. Neither, however, is what drives the book. Instead, the characters - both the ones in the encompassing story arc and those in each of the fascinating vignettes that tie it together - draw you in. They are tightly written, and I found myself engrossed in them, the overarching mystery, and each little story as well. You may notice that I do not tell much of the plot. Like many stories, any brief summary will sound flat and stale - perhaps even improbable. But it is not the plot that draws us in here - it is the engrossing characters interacting in this dazzling world. Summarizing the plot would be like saying that a Frank Lloyd Wright building has four walls and a roof - technically true, but totally missing the point. This novel is the literary equivalent of an architectural marvel rising from a ghetto. It is something that all people should experience - even if you have to travel across the tracks to get there. And once you have, maybe you'll find it's not so bad over here after all.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A unsung classic of Science Fiction,
By A Customer
This review is from: Ivory: A Legend of Past and Future (Paperback)
This books deals with heart wrenching aspects of honor as seen by two men from entirely different societies. It tries to illuminate for the reader such differences as are seen between the way American Anglo-Saxons view the world (a total disregard for the past), and the way others view it (holding the past in great sanctity). On the way, you'll be in for a treat of a story and some great writing.The whole tie-in about Mountain that Walks is pretty good, to.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Decent story that loses momentum 2/3 way through,
By Anastasia (Staten Island, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Ivory: A Legend of Past and Future (Paperback)
Half-way into the book, "Ivory" was turning out to be a very enjoyable detective-type story.
It starts with a gambling game on a far planet between various human and alien criminals. As the outcome, a pair of huge elephant tusks changes hands. The rest of the book (told in the format of multiple stort stories) revolves around the history of the tusks across 6,000 years, from 1892 AD on. The story is framed as a research quest by a scientist who must find out the current location of the tusks for some unknown reason. As I said, reading the exploits of various criminals and fanatics was entertaining. Too bad about 2/3rds through, the story loses momentum. I can tell you when. On page 230, when for the first time, we take a step back in time instead of forward, the fun of the chase wanes. By then, you know why the tusks are important. Plus, reading historical accounts of men is much less interesting than the made-up ones. So, it was a decent read. Resnick's writing is descriptive and delightful. It would have been better if the stories/findings were arranged in a more chronological order to build up the excitement & drama and the chapter "Hunters" omited altogether. Still, the stories are excellent and even on their own make the book worth reading.
3.0 out of 5 stars
An Interesting Science Fiction Fantasy,
By
This review is from: Ivory: A Legend of Past and Future (Paperback)
Ivory is a Science Fiction tale spanning millennia with some fantasy trappings. The science fiction parts include extraterrestrial aliens and human colonies spanning the galaxy. The fantasy aspect includes a long dead prophetic shaman, vague mystical abilities, and the ghost of an immense elephant.
Duncan Rojas, an almost totally emotionless and asocial researcher whose day job is to authenticate hunting trophies, is hired by Bukoba Mandaka, the last member of the Maasai tribe to locate a pair of 7,000 year old elephant tusks. Through flashbacks to events uncovered by Rojas using an extremely sophisticated computer, the history of the tusks is revealed although the reason Mandaka wants them is not until near the end of the story. I found this to be an imaginative and engaging story. The premise is certainly different although the mix of science fiction and fantasy seemed a bit awkward to me. I especially had a hard time with the elephant spirit, which is never really explained, other than it is the ghost of an immense and very intelligent elephant who wants its tusks back. What it really is, how it came to be, or what it means is only vaguely alluded to. The characters are interestingly quirky but do not provoke much in the way of empathy. The two main characters are about as emotionless as the computer Rojas uses for his research. They are both compulsively driven to accomplish their mission, Rojas by choice and Mandaka because of his belief that he has no choice but neither is engagingly human. The book is well written and compelling. Once the mystery of the tusks is presented, you want to find out what happened to them and some of the flashbacks, almost short stories in themselves, are quite enjoyable.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Another great story,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Ivory: A Legend of Past and Future (Paperback)
If you liked Birthright: Book of Man, you'll like this book. It's set in the same universe and works in a similar format.
4.0 out of 5 stars
A story of elephant tusks spanning thousands of years...,
By
This review is from: Ivory: A Legend of Past and Future (Paperback)
Duncan Rojas, a researcher for "Braxton's Records of Big Game" in the year 6303, is tasked with physically locating the tusks of the Kilimanjaro Elephant, a huge beast killed in the 1800s. Unfortunately, they seemed to have disappeared from all commercial records 3000 years earlier. Rojas and his computer are persistent, however, and they uncover minute clues that trace the fate of this ivory. Rojas also uncovers information about the person who commissioned the search: Bukoba Mandaka, the last of the Maasai.
Mike Resnick has constructed a galaxy-spanning mystery tale with Ivory: A Legend Of Past And Future. The vignettes from the past and the future, with different intelligent races interacting with the Kilimanjaro Elephant tusks, keeps the reader guessing about their fate. The ending is a bit of a let-down, as super-wealthy Mandaka succumbs to "tradition" that he seems to have invented. No matter. This was still an engaging read, mixing history, zoology, and alien cultures, no matter what century you happen to be reading about at the time.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great sf,
This review is from: Ivory: A Legend of Past and Future (Paperback)
In 6303, Braxton's Records of Big Game senior researcher Duncan Rojas knows why he relishes his work on a wasteland where the biggest surviving animal besides the few humans like himself is a small rodent. His vocation enables Duncan to dream of a better earth where large mammals lived instead of being extinct or like most Homo sapiens deserted the planet for other worlds leaving behind a dying orb.
Thus when the apparent last Maasai, a race most thought long gone, Bukoba Mandaka, offers him a large some of money to locate the legendary vanished tusks of the long extinct Kilimanjaro Elephant, he would have agreed even without the cash. Over three millennia ago the last known tusks weighing easily over 200 pounds vanished. Although he tries to learn his client's motive as this will be an expensive project, Mandaka declines to give any further explanation. Still the challenge awakens Rojas from an ennui that had left him almost as dead inside as the planet. As Rojas follows clues through time and worlds with deadly adversaries competing for the prize, he begins to truly appreciate what was lost when man abused his stewardship of the planet as he learns how magnificent Africa once was through the people he meets and ultimately the majestic Kilimanjaro Elephant. IVORY is science fiction at its best as the tale works on multiple levels with the most prevalent being a cautionary thriller warning people that what we do today has impact on all the tomorrows. The story line is fast-paced and loaded with non stop action as Rojas travels back and forth through time and across the galaxy in his quest while rivals less scrupulous want him eliminated. However, even with a terrific hero and excellent eccentric support characters that make the pit stops eras and places seem genuine; the Kilimanjaro Elephant owns Mike Resnick's thriller as the magnificent animal even in a limited appearance serves as the symbolic warning of man's reign ending with a disposable planet dying. Harriet Klausner |
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Ivory: A Legend of Past and Future by Mike Resnick (Paperback - August 8, 2007)
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