The Tusks of Extinction
Ray Nayler
 
   MacMillan
   Fiction, Sci-Fi
   Themes: Altered DNA, Anthropomorphism, Artificial Intelligence, Diversity, Girl Power, Prehistoric Animals,Wilderness Tales
   ****
   
Description
Dr. Damira Khismatullina dedicated her life to studying and saving elephants - only to be murdered for her efforts. 
   One hundred years after her death, a recorded version of her consciousness is resurrected by a team of desperate 
   Russian scientists. Though wild elephants have been extinct for decades, cloning efforts have resurrected woolly 
   mammoths, part of a greater effort to restore lost megafauna-shaped habitats and mitigate climate change... but just 
   recreating genetics does not restore the habits, the experience, the many parts of an animal's "culture" that died 
   out. The new creatures may look like mammoths, but don't know how to behave like mammoths, and Damira is the only 
   mind recorded in the Russian archives who might stand a chance of teaching them - if her thoughts were uploaded into 
   the brain of a mammoth matriarch.
   Using her experience with elephants and her extensive studies, Damira shows her new herd how to survive and thrive in 
   the Siberian tundra... but when poachers inevitably arrive, and the Russian government begins selling exclusive 
   permits to hunt in the preserve as a way to recoup their massive investment in the project, will she be able to save 
   her new family from going the way of their ancestors?
Review
The relatively recent megafaunal extinction in the wake of the last Ice Age had lasting effects on habitats around 
   the world, effects we are still learning about. Rewilding the Arctic with lost beasts is one proposed method of 
   mitigating climate change, and has apparently already seen some promising efforts in regions where it has been 
   attempted with extant animals like bison - but, of course, until one can resurrect some of the true giants of the 
   lost mammoth steppes, one really can't begin to get the full impact or full benefits. Woolly mammoths in particular 
   are one of the great "near misses" of history; isolated populations were still around when the Egyptian pyramids were 
   being built. This book examines the problems of species revival, not just for the species itself but for the main 
   drivers of the current "sixth extinction" sweeping the globe: humans.
   Despite coming from urban Russia, Damira has had a fascination with elephants since childhood, devoting herself to 
   elephant conservation and ultimately giving up her life trying to stop the unstoppable tide of human greed, 
   short-sightedness, and raw thirst for destruction (all enabled by humanity's seemingly infinite capacity for apathy 
   about things they cannot directly experience, the ability to rationalize away the ultimately untenable costs of 
   modern society). Given a second chance at life, she embraces her role as matriarch of the first mammoth herd to walk 
   the earth in thousands of years. Much as she learned about elephants from her life and studies, being a mammoth is 
   an entirely new and fascinating experience, her new brain allowing her to relive and re-examine memories in a way 
   her human brain could never imagine. Many years into her new role, when she finds the telltale traces of a poacher 
   kill, she is not about to stand by idly, using her new mammoth brain and old human mind to tackle the problem in a 
   most decisive way. Meanwhile, Svyatoslav, the son of a bounty hunter, joins his father on the first-ever attempt at 
   poaching mammoth ivory, showing just how people get pulled into that world, the desperation and greed and 
   self-delusion that turns them into disposable tools of the greedy, grasping elite. Much as he hates it, he cannot 
   see a way out, until an unexpected opportunity arises. A third storyline follows the married couple Vladimir and 
   Anthony, the first to buy a license to hunt a woolly mammoth. Vladimir, son of expatriate Russians, struggles to 
   feel a connection to the country he only heard about from his embittered family, even as he struggles to reconcile 
   the wealthy man he loved for many years with the dark side that emerges on the hunt. The three storylines inevitably 
   intersect, and that intersection inevitably involves violence and tragedy, while confronting thorny issues of whether 
   or not humans will ever be able to coexist with other species on this world, whether greed is an inevitable and 
   unstoppable force that will ultimately be the doom of everything.
   The story came close to losing a mark for repetition and meandering, as well as a few parts that felt forced for 
   convenience (such as a prolonged and remarkably plot-relevant conversation "overheard" via drone by one character, an 
   "as-you-know-Bob" explanation of things that almost had me rolling my eyes at how unnatural it felt to have two people 
   randomly discussing the exact things the listener needed to know about to enable the next part of their tale at the 
   exact right time). It also could not help but be depressing on some level, when the extinction of elephants (and too 
   many other species) looks all too inevitable because there's just plain too much money and power behind the forces 
   enabling butchery and destruction and not enough considering the long-term survival consequences. Beyond that, this 
   is a powerful and unique story that lingers in the memory.
