Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge - Hugo and Nebula Winner

ByMike Resnick

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Readers` Reviews

★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
taufiq
I Enjoyed the book, the reading flowed. Most of the concepts and sub-stories were very interesting and thought provoking.
However, the aliens were much too naive, and quite unbelievable as characters... Same things happening over and over and never learning - but maybe it strikes me because I AM human...

I would recommend it to my Sci-Fi/Skeptic friends who would probably enjoy it as well.

All in all a very pessimistic and optimistic story at the same time.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
bookmancph
A very creative work. In a very unique fashion it gives us a perspective of mankind through the "eyes" of a n alien being.

Yet another wonderful Mike Resnick book deserving of the awards it received.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
redstars butterflies
Considering that Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge was a HUGO and NEBULA award winner I had high hopes. The concept of an alien bunch of anthropologists traveling to the Olduvai Gorge was interesting. The alien who could tease out the past events by simply touching an object struck me as illogical.

I did enjoy the read but it doesn't go on my list of books that deserve a second reading.
Bath Time! :: Pajama Time! (Boynton on Board) :: Unstoppable :: Official Ghostbusters Edition - Tobin's Spirit Guide :: Grace Based Parenting: Set Your Familiy Free
★ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
steven werber
I was extremely disappointed that I bought this Kindle offering. It was a very good story. But to sell it as a book is a distortion, it is a short story. The premise was excellent, the prose was well done. But, again, it was a short story.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
hannah
Mike Resnick’s science fiction story “Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge” was originally published in the October/November 1994 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. Though the publisher Phoenix Pick is packaging and selling this work on the store as if it were a novella, it’s really not long enough to qualify as one. In Resnick’s 2012 collection The Incarceration of Captain Nebula and Other Lost Futures, “Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge” only takes up 47 printed pages. So it’s really only a short story, or perhaps a “novelette,” which is fine, as long as you know what you’re getting before you spend your money. Fortunately, it happens to be a very good short story. It won the Hugo and Nebula awards for best novella of the year and was nominated for a number of other international sci-fi prizes.

Resnick has repeatedly traveled to Africa and frequently sets his science fiction stories there. For anyone who doesn’t know, Olduvai Gorge is a valley in Tanzania where many of the earliest specimens of human remains have been found. Much of our knowledge of the evolution of mankind has come from the fossils dug from the soil of Olduvai Gorge, which have fleshed out the human family tree with such progenitors and relatives as Homo habilis, Paranthropus boisei, Homo erectus, and early Homo sapiens. Resnick’s story thus falls into the category of anthropological and archaeological science fiction, a subgenre I always enjoy, though good examples of which are infrequent and hard to find.

The story takes place thousands of years in the future. The narrator, a member of an alien species, informs us that mankind is now extinct. While they lived, however, humans ruled the universe, mercilessly conquering millions of worlds and reigning over their interplanetary empire with an iron fist. Now, almost 5,000 years after humanity’s demise, an archaeological expedition made up of scientists of a number of extraterrestrial races makes a pilgrimage to Olduvai Gorge to learn what they can about mankind’s origins. The narrator, known as He Who Views, has the special sensory power of feeling the history of artifacts that are subjected to his examination. As members of the expedition uncover objects from the Gorge, the narrator reveals the stories behind the items, thus sketching out the history of humanity in the region from the prehistoric past to the far-off future.

“Seven Views from Olduvai Gorge” is hard to get into at first. The narrative’s unique time-travel device is admirably innovative, but the first few vignettes, taking place in the past, are more historical fiction than sci-fi, leaving the reader to wonder when Resnick is actually going to venture into speculation about the future of mankind. In its latter half, however, the story really takes off, and Resnick’s dystopian future brings into focus mankind’s destructive propensities for violence, avarice, and environmental degradation. The story succeeds both as mind-expanding science fiction and as thought-provoking social commentary. Resnick has the ability to render extraordinary concepts and events in a way that grounds them in the realm of the realistic. His writing reminds me of the work of Clifford D. Simak, which is one of the best compliments I could give any sci-fi writer. Whether a work of fiction this short is worth the cover price may be up for debate, but there’s no denying that “Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge” is a worthwhile read.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
paul gillin
A creative look At mankind from perspective of a group of alien archaeologists in the far future. The author "nails it" in the manner in which the evolution of humans is presented and our impact on the galaxy. I liked everything about this story.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
jtabz
I am a pretty discerning reader. I mainly read classics and "serious" literature.

I do venture into sci-fi and fantasy, and would do so more often if it were not for the fact that there are SO many bad books in those genres.

But the books that make it worth it (the J.R.R. Tolkeins, or the J.K. Rowlings) are not only satisfying to read but also so much fun!

Novellas are a good niche because even if they aren't great, they are short enough so that you feel you haven't wasted much time.

But you need not worry with this book. It isn't high literature. But the writing is decent enough, and the idea is intriguing enough, and the plot is interesting enough that ANYONE who enjoys sci-fi at all will enjoy this elegant little book.
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