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The Last Animal: A Novel por Ramona Ausubel
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The Last Animal: A Novel (edición 2024)

por Ramona Ausubel (Autor)

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
1344206,771 (3.3)7
Jane is a serious scientist on the cutting-edge team of a bold project looking to "de-extinct" the wooly mammoth. She's privileged to have been sent to Siberia to hunt for ancient DNA, but there's a catch: Jane's two "tagalong" teen daughters are there with her in the Arctic, and they're bored enough to cause trouble. Brilliant, fiery, sharp-tongued Eve is fifteen and willing to talk back to the male scientists in a way her mother is not. And sweet, thirteen-year-old Vera, who seems to absorb all the emotional burdens of her small family, just wants to be home in Berkeley, baking cakes and watching bad tv. When Eve and Vera stumble upon a 4,000-year-old baby mammoth that has been perfectly preserved, their discovery sets off a chain of events that pit Jane against her colleagues, and soon her status at the lab is tenuous at best. So what does a female scientist do when she's a passionate devotee of her field but her gender and life history hold her back? She goes rogue. As Jane and her daughters ping-pong from the slopes of Siberia to a university in California, from the shores of Iceland to an exotic animal farm in Italy, The Last Animal takes readers on an expansive, big-hearted journey that explores the possibility and peril of the human imagination on a changing planet, what it's like to be a woman and a mother in a field dominated by men, and how a wondrous discovery can best be enjoyed with family. Even teenagers"--… (más)
Miembro:bigmissy6
Título:The Last Animal: A Novel
Autores:Ramona Ausubel (Autor)
Información:Riverhead Books (2024), 304 pages
Colecciones:Tu biblioteca
Valoración:****1/2
Etiquetas:climate change, mammoths, magical realism, siberia, coming of age, 2024, feminism, grief, italy, speculative, mothers and daughters, science, iceland, extinction, usa, ötzi

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The Last Animal por Ramona Ausubel

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Mostrando 4 de 4
A scientist and her two very charming adolescent daughters begin a journey in Siberia in the hopes of creating a prehistoric mammoth which will save the planet. It ends in Italy with a baby mammoth walking into the woods. Complicated relationships. The worst part of the book was the fact that so much of the science had changed but women roles remained the same. ( )
  shazjhb | May 6, 2024 |
A mixed bag of a book. This book is about but is not enough about mammoths, cutting edge science, feminism, or women in science. Instead, this book centers on extinctions, broadly defined: megafauna extinction, prehistoric humanoid extinction, personal extinction, familial extinction, and possibly the biggest one of all, the very real possibility of global extinction through climate change. It's a weighty theme and the author is at their best at moments when the characters realize that despite their hopes and wishes, extinction is permanent. There's no coming back from it, which generates the grief that permeates the novel.

Greater character development was needed. We never have a sense of what's really driving the characters apart from grief. Grief is powerful, but it's not enough to explain many of their choices. There's a lack of depth to relationship between the father and daughters, as if they never really knew each other, so it's hard to understand why they're so overwhelmed with grief. We also don't have any other real information about Jane other than that she's a grieving widow and having a hard time parenting teenagers as a single mother. There's also not quite enough action or unexpected developments to sustain the readers' interest and certain plot points that could have given the novel a push are never explored. (Why does Jane never refer to The Professor by name? Are the British couple really the villains? They never really feel that sinister, just odd.) At one point, literally all of the main characters are just hanging out on an Italian estate doing nothing waiting for something to happen but it's never quite clear what they're waiting for. It would not have been hard to add some suspense and action to this novel, which I regret to say ended about the way I expected. I love the idea and exploring the theme of extinction, but this wasn't the book I was hoping for. ( )
  lisamunro | Nov 20, 2023 |
A story about a single mother with her two teenage daughters as they struggle against the sexism in the scientific community, and bring a wooly mammoth baby into existence. This is easy to get through and enjoyable, but I need the characters to have more distinct voices. I'd be caught in a page of dialog and have to check who said what between the mother and daughters multiple times. This is also strange in that while something very earth-shaking happens, bringing back an extinct species! No one know about it? and so nothing actually happens in the end. The focus is much more on the relationships between the mother and daughters and their grief over losing their husband/father. ( )
1 vota KallieGrace | Jun 12, 2023 |
Eve and Vera, the teenage protagonists of Ramona Ausubel’s The Last Animal like to tell each other fantastical stories as a way to ground themselves in the crazy life they live traveling around the world at the whim of their scientist parents. When their father dies, their mother, Jane, forced to continue their hectic existence in pursuit of finishing her Ph.D., takes them to Siberia for the summer. When they stumble upon a baby woolly mammoth, they have no idea how it will change all of their lives. The Last Animal defies genre-fication as it is a feminist, environmental, coming-of-age story about parenthood, grief, and finding yourself at 15 and 40. I highly recommend this book to readers of Lydia Millet, Emma Straub, and others looking for something different about women and family. ( )
1 vota Hccpsk | Apr 30, 2023 |
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Jane is a serious scientist on the cutting-edge team of a bold project looking to "de-extinct" the wooly mammoth. She's privileged to have been sent to Siberia to hunt for ancient DNA, but there's a catch: Jane's two "tagalong" teen daughters are there with her in the Arctic, and they're bored enough to cause trouble. Brilliant, fiery, sharp-tongued Eve is fifteen and willing to talk back to the male scientists in a way her mother is not. And sweet, thirteen-year-old Vera, who seems to absorb all the emotional burdens of her small family, just wants to be home in Berkeley, baking cakes and watching bad tv. When Eve and Vera stumble upon a 4,000-year-old baby mammoth that has been perfectly preserved, their discovery sets off a chain of events that pit Jane against her colleagues, and soon her status at the lab is tenuous at best. So what does a female scientist do when she's a passionate devotee of her field but her gender and life history hold her back? She goes rogue. As Jane and her daughters ping-pong from the slopes of Siberia to a university in California, from the shores of Iceland to an exotic animal farm in Italy, The Last Animal takes readers on an expansive, big-hearted journey that explores the possibility and peril of the human imagination on a changing planet, what it's like to be a woman and a mother in a field dominated by men, and how a wondrous discovery can best be enjoyed with family. Even teenagers"--

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