The Hugo and Nebula Awardâwinning author âhas cultivated in these pages an epic history that spans millennia and the breadth of the galaxyâ (Tampa Bay Newspapers).
Duncan Rojas, an employee in the research department of Wilford Braxtonâs Records of Big Game, rarely gets such a request. Bukoba Mandaka, the last descendant of the Maasai, wants his help finding a relic that has been lost for three thousand years: the tusks of the famous Kilimanjaro Elephant. In the year 6303 of the Galactic Era, all animals have become extinct. Itâs an almost impossible job, but what Bukoba is willing to payâand Duncanâs own curiosityâprove irresistible.
As Duncan puts all the technology at his disposal to the task, he begins to follow the remarkable odyssey of the ivory through cultures, time, and the universeâfrom being used as a pawn in a power play by unethical scientists to propping up a brutal warlord, from being worshipped as a symbol of immortality by an alien race to being turned into a matter of national pride by an opportunistic politician. But to Duncan, the even bigger mysteryâand one that he must solveâis why Bukoba is willing to put his own future on the line for something so irretrievably lost to the past . . .
âResnickâs fluent writing and respect for African cultures and wildlife make for some smoothly ironic glimpses of people who imagined they âownedâ the ivory.â âPublishers Weekly
âMarvelously satisfying science fiction . . . donât miss.â âAnalog
âResnick is an excellent storyteller . . . Ivory is a winner.â âThe Cincinnati Post