The White Bone
A Novel
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Buy for $20.73
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Narrated by:
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Eileen Stevens
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By:
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Barbara Gowdy
A thrilling journey into the minds of African elephants as they struggle to survive.
If, as many recent nonfiction best sellers have revealed, animals possess emotions and awareness, they must also have stories. In The White Bone, a novel imagined entirely from the perspective of African elephants, Barbara Gowdy creates a world whole and separate that yet illuminates our own.
For years, young Mud and her family have roamed the high grasses, swamps, and deserts of the sub-Sahara. Now the earth is scorched by drought, and the mutilated bodies of family and friends lie scattered on the ground, shot down by ivory hunters. Nothing - not the once familiar terrain, or the age-old rhythms of life, or even memory itself - seems reliable anymore. Yet a slim prophecy of hope is passed on from water hole to water hole: the sacred white bone of legend will point the elephants toward the Safe Place. And so begins a quest through Africa's vast and perilous plains - until at last the survivors face a decisive trial of loyalty and courage.
In The White Bone, Barbara Gowdy performs a feat of imagination virtually unparalleled in modern fiction. Plunged into an alien landscape, we orient ourselves in elephant time, elephant space, elephant consciousness, and begin to feel, as Gowdy puts it, "what it would be like to be that big and gentle, to be that imperiled, and to have that prodigious memory".
©1998 Barbara Gowdy (P)2017 Audible, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...
Hauntingly beautiful
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The White Bone gives you that kind of freedom to enjoy and cry over their journeys.
Lovely tearjerker
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To compound the issues with plot and style are the characters--exactly one character (a calf named Date Bed) in the entire book is likeable. The others are either paper-thin caricatures, unpleasant, or off-putting in some other way. The worst probably being a bull that we are clearly intended to like, but who only comes across as a creepy pedophile. (Not hyperbole--considerable page space is given to the hard-on he got from the scent of a young calf.
The whole affair is a tedious, pointless slog.
If you want good fiction with a non-human protagonist and an environmental message, pass this up and get The Bees.
A decent premise wasted on terrible writing.
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