Current:Home > reviews'The Last Animal' is a bright-eyed meditation on what animates us -DollarDynamic
'The Last Animal' is a bright-eyed meditation on what animates us
View
Date:2025-04-17 04:52:21
What exactly is a family? Even more profoundly, why is a family?
Entire wings of the literary canon have confronted these questions, usually by framing them within the context of human families only. Which is why The Last Animal, the latest novel by Ramona Ausubel, soars where so many other books about family dynamics simply coast.
Granted, Ausubel's tale has a very recognizable family nucleus — a mother and her two teenage daughters, bound by blood yet fractured by tragedy. Where The Last Animal breaks from the pack is the addition of an ostensibly wild-card element: the bioengineered resurrection of an extinct animal species. Namely, the woolly mammoth.
Don't let that x-factor throw you. As proved by Ben Mezrich's 2017 nonfiction book Woolly, there's a rich vein of human narrative to be drawn from the paleontological exploration of those great, shaggy, dearly departed pachyderms. But where Mezrich dramatized true, scientific events, Ausubel brings deep emotional truth to her work of dramatic fiction. The setup is sturdy and abundant with promise: Jane, a graduate student in paleobiology, brings her daughters, 13 and 15, Vera and Eve, along for an Arctic dig. The girls' father died in a car accident a year earlier, and that loss hangs heavily over their heads as the trio trek to the top of the earth — "a bare place, a lost place, where ancient beasts had once roamed." Jane is looking for fossils; at the same time, her own family feels like one, a shell-like remnant of something that was once thriving and whole.
Rather than wallowing in interiorized melodrama, though, The Last Animal instantly injects Ausubel's telltale zing — in the form of an ice-bound baby mammoth and Jane's decision to go rogue on a kind of madcap ethical bender. But even more refreshing is the utter rejection of miserableness on the part of the grieving family, even as their shaggy-dog (woolly-dog?) quest starts to fly off the rails. Naturally, the question of whether it's possible to clone the baby mammoth arises, followed by the question of whether it's right to play God in that way — followed by a far more earth-shattering possibility of reviving humans. Read into that as metaphorically as you like. Ausubel sure does.
The book also tackles sexism, both personal and institutional, and it does so with wryness rather than clickbait cliches. "Dudes, ugh," Vera groans as she tries to make sense of her mother's apparent willingness to play by the rules of boys'-club academia: "The patriarchy, and stuff." It's comic, and it's cutting, and it helps impart an air of witty tribunal to Jane's, Eve's and Vera's constant banter. The fact that Ausubel has fridged the character of Jane's husband — in a tale about frozen creatures, no less — is itself a neat gender inversion. But it's not revenge; during one of Vera's characteristic spells of gleeful mischief, "a Dad-spark glinted, a pilgrimage to some part of him."
"They would all be bones sooner or later, but they were not themselves specimens," Ausubel writes late in the story, just as the full moral consequence of Jane's quixotic actions starts to bear down on her and the girls. The book's way with distanced, almost clinical turns of phrase is strangely enough part of its charm. Images such as "jars of pickled mutants" don't just pop off the page; they also evoke the dark whimsy of Katherine Dunn's classic Geek Love — another novel that uses genetic manipulation and macabre oddities to probe the nature of family. Ultimately, however, Ausubel writes of pride: motherly pride, daughterly pride, sisterly pride, and how this power can sustain togetherness. And even resurrect wholeness. Splicing wit and wisdom, The Last Animal is a bright-eyed meditation on what animates us, biologically as well as emotionally — but most of all, familially.
Jason Heller is a Hugo Award-winning editor and author of the book Strange Stars: David Bowie, Pop Music, and the Decade Sci-Fi Exploded.
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Restaurant chain Tijuana Flats files for bankruptcy, announces closure of 11 locations
- Celebrity designer Nancy Gonzalez sentenced to prison for smuggling handbags made of python skin
- Beyoncé Shares Rare Look at Her Natural Hair With Wash Day Routine
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- Sabres hire Lindy Ruff as coach. He guided Buffalo to the playoffs in 2011
- Candace Cameron Bure Reveals How She “Almost Died” on Set of Fuller House Series
- Miss USA 2019 Cheslie Kryst Details Mental Health Struggles in Posthumous Memoir
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Lyrid meteor shower to peak tonight. Here's what to know
Ranking
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Mississippi lawmakers move toward restoring voting rights to 32 felons as broader suffrage bill dies
- Jury deliberating in Iraq Abu Ghraib prison abuse civil case; contractor casts blame on Army
- America’s child care crisis is holding back moms without college degrees
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Knicks go up 2-0 in first round of NBA playoffs after Sixers blow lead in final minute
- WWE partnering with UFC, will move NXT Battleground 2024 to UFC APEX facility
- Meet California's Toy Man, a humble humanitarian who's brought joy to thousands of kids
Recommendation
Trump's 'stop
Restaurant chain Tijuana Flats files for bankruptcy, announces closure of 11 locations
MLB power rankings: The futile Chicago White Sox are the worst team in baseball ... by far
Key takeaways from the opening statements in Donald Trump’s hush money trial
Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
The remains of a WWII pilot from Michigan are identified 8 decades after a fatal bombing mission
Chinese generosity in lead-up to cleared doping tests reflects its growing influence on WADA
California announces first new state park in a decade and sets climate goals for natural lands