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Ray Nayler: The Tusks of Extinction (Hardcover, Tordotcom) 5 stars

When you bring back a long-extinct species, there’s more to success than the DNA.

Moscow …

Moving SF Thriller

5 stars

(em português: sol2070.in/2024/05/The-Tusks-of-Extinction )

American Ray Nayler wrote one of the best science fiction books I've read in recent years: “The Mountain in the Sea”. That's why I've been waiting for the release of “The Tusks of Extinction” (2024).

It's a 105-page novella — something between a short story and a novel — about extinction, biotechnology and consciousness transplantation.

In the future, mammoths are genetically recreated in a reserve in Siberia, but as the species depends on a culture passed down for generations, they don't survive as there is no one to teach them. The solution is to transplant the consciousness of a murdered elephant human guardian, in the hope that the pachydermic culture will be useful to the resurrected species. The complicating factor is that to finance the research, mammoth hunts are offered to billionaires willing to pay millions for the privilege of killing one. And illegal hunters are also starting to go after the valuable tusks.

I have a grudge about the cliché of consciousness transference, but the book is so good that I didn't care. The dive into the minds and culture of these animals is particularly moving.

It's not as good as the previous book only because of the smaller number of pages and the more limited focus of the story. But I agree with the publicity for the book, which presents Nayler as a ‘new master of science fiction’.