Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge by Mike Resnick


Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge
Title : Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : -
Language : English
Format Type : Kindle Edition
Number of Pages : 48
Publication : First published January 1, 1994
Awards : Hugo Award Best Novella (1995), Nebula Award Best Novella (1994), Locus Award Best Novella (1995), Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award (1995), Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire Nouvelle étrangère (1999), Premi UPC de Ciència-Ficció Miquel Barceló Primer premi (ex aequo) (1994), Premio Ignotus Mejor cuento extranjero (Best Foreign Story) (1996), SF Chronicle Award Novella (1995), HOMer Award Novella (1994)

Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge is one of the most celebrated novellas ever written. It not only won both the Hugo and Nebula, but also the HOMer award and the SF Chronicle Poll and was a nominee for the Locus Award and the Sturgeon Award. It was also nominated for a number of international awards, winning the Ignotus and the Universitat Polytechnica Awards in Spain, the Prix Ozone Award in France and the Futura Award in Croatia.

In the far future, eons after the demise of Humanity and its far-flung galactic empire, a group of alien archeologists visits Earth to uncover the secret of the dead race’s initial overwhelming success and its ultimate death.

Digging through layers of archeological strata at Olduvai Gorge, they discover seven unique artifacts, each related to a different era of humanity’s history and each telling a unique story about humankind’s strengths and weaknesses.

But are they prepared for their final discovery, which will change their worlds forever?


Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge Reviews


  • Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽

    Final review, first posted on
    Fantasy Literature:

    In this Hugo and Nebula award-winning novella by Mike Resnick, humanity once controlled much of the galaxy due to its ambition and ruthlessness, but then declined for unspecified reasons and is now an extinct race. About five thousand years after mankind’s extinction, a group of diverse alien anthropologists travels to Earth to excavate Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania, which is considered by many scientists to be the birthplace of humanity, where we first evolved. The team finds several ancient artifacts in Olduvai Gorge from different layers in the strata, representing different periods of time in the past: a triangular rock, a broken chain link, a knife handle, and so on. One alien, known as “He Who Views,” has the convenient ability to temporarily absorb an object into itself and experience key moments in history related to the object. He Who Views retells seven stories of mankind’s past based upon these artifacts, revealing both our strengths and our weaknesses.

    The depth and details of the history that He Who Views relates don’t entirely make logical sense, as much of each story is only indirectly related to the particular artifact that plays a role in that story, but the artifacts do provide a convenient hook for each story and a framework for the account of humanity’s rise and fall. The tale of an African photo safari in the year 2103 was particularly memorable. Though some may differ, I thought it was an overly grim view of our race (though the abysmal current U.S. presidential campaign does, I confess, give me pause for thought). This novella focuses almost exclusively on mankind’s penchant for murder, enslaving each other, abusing our planet and its environment, and other types of destructiveness, while giving a nod to our resolve and hardiness. As a whole, it’s a compelling and sobering look at who we are as a people, and why we might be viewed with alarm by other intelligent beings.

    Free online at
    Subterranean Press.

  • Paul Weiss

    A dark and disturbing view of humanity's history

    SEVEN VIEWS OF OLDUVAI GORGE posits a distant future in which Man is long extinct. Having arisen as a deceptively small and to all appearances harmless bipedal ancestor of the earliest pro-simian species, Man evolved into a violent and powerful predator who was master of his planet. Technological advancements allowed Man to travel to the stars colonizing a million planets and enslaving or eliminating all those he met who posed any threat, real or imagined. Notwithstanding his powerful position astride the top of the galactic food chain, as it were, mankind has slipped into extinction. Five millennia after the last known representative of our species died, an alien planet has sent a scientific archeological team to earth to study man's rise and fall by a careful examination of the artifacts they find in the location now known as the birthplace of our species - Olduvai Gorge.

    SEVEN VIEWS OF OLDUVAI GORGE is a series of seven short stories commenting on man's violent and aggressive nature ranging in time from our earliest pre-history as a species that could hardly be graced even with the term "caveman" to a hypothesized galactic superpower with technological skills that included interstellar travel and domination of a million other planets. The stories are all told by "He Who Sees", a member of the alien archeological team who has the uncanny ability to see, hear, feel and completely experience the history of an artifact by subsuming it into his own body and absorbing its history into his mentality.

    This collection of stories, which won the 1994 Nebula Award for best novella, portray a bleak, dismal and disappointed view of an aggressive, violent and self-centered humanity. Perhaps the most disappointing thing of all about this fine book is that, as a reader of the book and a member of the race under discussion, I can find no reason to dispute Michael Resnick's hard-hearted view of our history.

    It would be most unfair to disclose the point of the final story to a potential reader. But, suffice it to say, although Michael Resnick's cynicism remains obvious at the close of his novel, it is just possible - barely - that we could make something of ourselves if we had another chance.

    SEVEN VIEWS OF OLDUVAI GORGE is short, sweet and compellingly powerful. Highly recommended.

    Paul Weiss

  • Caro the Helmet Lady

    Couldn't get this story out of my head while reading
    Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind. So I've reread this after many years just to discover that it's still very fresh and considering our political situation (our as of a human kind) this is going to stay fresh for a very long time. Tragic and gorgeous, in a way.

  • Stephen

    6.0 stars. On my list of "All Time Favorite" stories. An amazing novella taking place after humanity's extinction and centering around an alien archaeological expedition sent to Earth to study man's rise and fall through, fossils and other artifacts, in the legendary place where man began. A fascinating look at an "outsiders" view of the cruelty and glory of human history. Add to that a GREAT ENDING and you have a truly memorable story.

    Winner: Hugo Award for Best Novella (1995)
    Winner: Nebula Award for Best Novella (1994)
    Nominee (runner up): Locus Award for Best Novella (1995)

  • Algernon (Darth Anyan)

    SF doing what SF does best : look at the world from a new perspective, asking the big cosmological and existential questions. The perspective in this novella is alien: a team of galactic archeologists exploring the cradle of humanity - Olduvai Gorge - thousands of years after humanity has become extinct, tens of thousands of years since Man has conquered the galaxy.

    What made us reach for the stars? What made us fail the survival game? The title evokes Hokusai woodcuts that are more than just snapshots of pretty landscapes. It evokes epic struggles of man against elemental forces of nature, majestic vistas where people move like ants against the far off siluette of a volcano, be it Mt. Fuji or Mt Kilimanjaro.

    Are seven short tableaux enough to paint the whole history of humanity? After reading Mike Resnick account, I would say yes. In the hands of a master storyteller 50 pages or so are more than enough. From an opening gambit chanelling Arthur C Clarke and the prologue to 2001: A Space Oddissey, the destiny of humanity will be defined by weapons, slavery, racial discrimination, the extinction of animal life on Earth, the destruction of the environment, the exodus from the home planet that will ultimately lead back in an elegant symmetry to the team of aliens looking for answers in the dust of Olduvai Gorge.

    A novella well worth checking out.

  • Scott

    Seven views of Olduvai Gorge has won so many awards and accolades that it resembles a tinpot dictatorship army General, its shoulders bowing under the near-satirical weight of the medals, ribbons and braid cascading across its cover.

    With its almost universal acclaim, Mike Resnick's book could have been titled All The Major SF Awards, and How to Win Them.

    Sometimes, the weight of all these awards can hype a book up so much, that the content, even if brilliant, cannot hope to meet expectations. Not so here.

    Mike Resnick's novella is a genuine classic - one of those fantastically original works that stays with you long after you've read it.

    Seven views of Olduvai Gorge is set millennia after the extinction of humanity, and is told from the perspective of a member of a team of alien archaeologists who are exploring the accreted layers of history buried in Olduvai Gorge in contemporary Tanzania.

    As they dig, the central character, an alien who can viscerally experience the happenings of history by touching unearthed artefacts, pieces together the trajectory of the human race, as we rise from primitive roots to running a galaxy spanning civilisation that grew with shocking rapidity to encompass almost all the known universe.

    The civilisation that Homo Sapiens built however, was not a very nice one, and the era of humanity is remembered by the galaxy as one of brutal domination, conquest and violence. It is an epoch that the other sentient races of the Milky Way are glad to have seen the back of, at the same time as they are in awe of humanity's achievements.

    From this premise, Resnick embarks on a fascinating tour through some of the darker aspects of human history, each revealed by an artefact uncovered in Olduvai gorge - a piece of chain, a triangular stone, the handle of a knife and others.

    It 's a great setup, and Resnick uses it well, going beyond a kind of reverse, sedate Roadside Picnic and exploring some hard-hitting truths about human nature.

    As each object's sad history is uncovered our team of xenoarchaeologists is confronted with slavery, murder, racism, and other grim facts of human existence that both shock them and educate them as to how and why humanity rose so quickly, and treated other races so poorly.

    From these unassuming objects we begin to see how the brutality of the Terran interstellar empire reflects the fact that violence and bigotry have been baked into our species since our beginnings on the savannah of Africa. It's a grim message, but one that is artfully shown, and hard to argue with.

    Resnick takes his readers on an innovative tour through history, and gives them a grim glimpse of what human expansion into space could result in if we don't curb our less laudable traits. When I tried to imagine Resnick's fallen Terran empire I came up with Genghis Khan in space, which is a horrifying, but all too easily predicted possibility as our species looks heavenward.

    This is a quick read, being a slight novella of only 48 pages, but it packs a great deal in, and wastes no words in its fascinating and impactful story. It totally sucked me in, and the juxtoposition of the grimmer moments of human hstory with the reactions of alien observers brings fresh shock at how really, genuinely awful we humans have been to each other over the millennia.

    There's also a surprise or two, which I won't spoil as they are well worth the wait.

    It turns out that Resnicks' old general isn't so tinpot after all - behind the wall of medals and trophies on Seven views's cover sits a grizzled veteran of a story that earned every one of it's braids and honours.

    Read it - it's uncommon to find such a close matchup between critical acclaim and pure reading enjoyability.


    4.5 Distinguished Reading Crosses out of five.

  • Efka

    Theoretically, it's a stand-alone short story. Practically, it's a sequel of
    Birthright: The Book of Man. Actually, it is more of an epilogue for it.

    Everything I've written in
    my review of "Birthright" perfectly applies for this book too, so I see both no reason to add anything to aforementioned review and no choice but to rate Olduvai the same 5* I've handed to "Birthright".

  • Iñaki Velar García

    Tras ver la cantidad de premios que ganó, me esperaba más. La idea es original y la historia empieza bien, pero fui perdiendo interés al avanzar y me quedo con la sensación de que se podían haber contado más cosas.

  • Geoff

    great SF novella that spans the spectrum from "humanity f*** yeah!" through "humanity f*** no!" to "humanity wtf?"

  • Teck Wu

    Short story about men’s greed, resilience, and devotion, seen from the perspective of alien archaelogists.

  • Aracne Mileto

    Tengo que admitir que cuando vi el título de este cuento no me llamó para nada la atención, sin mencionar que tiene una de las portadas más horribles que he visto en mi vida. Pero como ya sabemos el hábito no hace al monje, y luego de investigar un poco descubrí que “La Garganta de Olduvai” es uno de los yacimientos paleontológicos más importantes de África. Esta información extra me ayudó a disfrutar más la lectura.

    La historia nos muestra un grupo de investigadores extraterrestre que están realizando excavaciones en La Garganta de Olduvai y recolectando una serie de muestras para conocer más sobre una raza que vivió mucho tiempo en el planeta Tierra, los humanos. Uno de estos investigadores tiene la capacidad de visualizar el entorno y la historia de estas muestras mediante una especie de fusión de su propio cuerpo con dichos objetos. De esta manera, se nos irá narrando las diferentes historias escondidas en estos objetos. De repente un miembro del equipo desaparece y el miedo se apodera de la tripulación…

    Me ha encantado este cuento. La narración y las diferentes visiones de cada objeto te dejan cada vez más enganchado, y te hacen meditar mucho sobre nuestra especie.

    Si te gusta la ciencia ficción no debes dejar de leer esta historia. Estoy segura que lo que esconde La Garganta de Olduvai te sorprenderá.

  • Michele

    Davvero all'altezza della sua fama!

  • David H.

    I went through a phase years ago where I read about 20 books in Resnick's Birthright setting, most of which were books set in a particular vision of the future (
    Santiago was my first and favorite of them), but I never got around to read this multi-award-winning novella until now. I thought it was a great if disturbing one--there's a frame story where different aliens are involved in an archeological expedition in Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania five thousand years after humanity has gone extinct, and our narrator-alien can "see" the past through some sort of alien psychometry. It's basically a window into how vicious and contradictory humans are, which can be interesting to read if not always fun. The final section is a bit chilling, though I was more disturbed by it--others might think "hell yeah!"

  • Asunlectora

    La humanidad se ha extinguido en la tierra y a la garganta de Olduvai (Tanzania), cuna del nacimiento de la especie humana, llega una expedición arqueológica extraterrestre con la misión de intentar comprender tanto ese nacimiento como su extinción. Entre los efectivos de esta expedición se encuentra un espécimen que es capaz de sentir las circunstancias que rodearon a los objetos que examina. La novela narra sus visiones, que abarcan 7 momentos puntuales distintos de la humanidad en el planeta tierra.
    Es una novela que hace uso de un lenguaje sencillo, que no simple, y que no cuesta seguir en ningún momento. La excepción serían apenas los primeros párrafos de cada visión, en los que tenemos que situarnos en el espacio, tiempo y circunstancias de lo que se narra. Tiene un trasfondo de crítica social y me ha resultado entretenida y curiosa.

  • Kai

    Mike Resnick's "Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge" is remembered for being the winner of the Nebula and Hugo Awards for Best Novella (in 1994 and 1995). Humanity had been the dominating species of the universe for eons, before its extinction about 5,000 years ago. Other races have an archaeological fascination with the origins of this once-great civilization and a research team is send to Earth to investigate what they may learn from its homeworld. It's especially its infamous contentiousness and crude social stratification that they want to explore.

    The story portrays humankind by episodes from various stages of its history that are representative of the species. The story is told by a being whose birth (or whatever the start of their existence may be like) took place even before humans evolved from apes. He is capable of controlling his (he presents himself as male) bodily structure and can assimilate objects in ways that make them experience their history. As the title suggests, he tells the reader of seven stories that he learned from artifacts found in the region around the East African in East Africa.

    The artifacts are mundane. The earliest is a stone used as a weapon when men were still tailless apes. He assimilates spearheads, the handle of a knife, a metallic pen, an anachronistic fetish, and unused cartridge, and what is alleged to be the remains of one of their team members. There are only very brief interludes between the stories, but often the commentary makes clear what aspect of humanity they are meant to symbolize.

    Of course, it's his intelligence that made men capable to survive. The first episode shows how the use of weapons and strategy made the small apes superior over the baboons. I enjoyed how the story was set up with two alien invaders send there to examine Earth's suitability for colonization. The second story focuses on slavery, one particularly puzzling institution. Why would a species enslave their own? Similar with racism (the theme of the third story), where do concepts of superiority over another race come from when they all belong to the same species?

    The later episodes all have environmentalist concerns. In the fourth story we already reached the 2100s. Because of its excessive ways of living, humanity caused the extinction of most animals on Earth. Safaris in Eastern Africa, where at least some exotic creatures are preserved, are the pleasure of some rich westerners. In the fifth story, a man is paid to dispose of large amounts of radioactive waste, which he carelessly stores near the titular gorge. Sure, he is suffering from nightmares afterwards (don't we all feel a slight discomfort when we think of this issue?), but he finds a way to appease his guilt. Tragically, this doesn't prevent that a century later innocent people have to live through his nightmares when an Earthquake brings the broken barrels back to the surface.

    The tales often feature the Maasai, an ethnic group living in Kenya and northern Tanzania (where the Olduvai Gorge is located). I don't know how accurate the people is portrayed here, but it is said that there is a strong band between them and their land (there is a rich literature on this issue in cultural anthropology). Reckless use of resources and technology has made their ancestral dwelling place uninhabitable (that sounds familiar, too). Because of pollution and radiation, the Maasai are forced to leave. Most accept their fate (they are promised a new beautiful land, presumably on a different plant). One man, however, upholds what he takes to be the genuine Maasai values. He rather dies in the land of his heroes than to become someone else.

    As must be clear from what was said so far, the novella's themes are amazingly powerful. But I have to admit that I wasn't very thrilled by the narrations. Strangely, I was more excited whenever we returned to the archaeological research expedition and I wanted to know more about what humanity has become (whether than learning about things I already knew).

    Because of this, I very much liked the climax. The events that the narrator assimilates at the end were only a couple of hours old. He realized that the bone they've found wasn't what was left of the exobiologist; it was the shin used to kill her. More importantly, it was the shinbone of a being that can be regarded as the mutated successor of humanity adjusted to its soiled environment. Euphorically, the narrator feels their ambition for greatness. Me too I felt more excited about this than some of the other stories.

    Rating: 3/5

  • Fil Garrison

    Every time I read a Hugo award-winner (and Nebula winner, with a runner-up for Locus to round out the big three), I really can see why the gleaming heaping praise is piled high on top of it. It's one Academy that knows what it's talking about.

    The story is simple, but implies a lot: a group of aliens visit the Olduvai Gorge, birthplace of humanity, to try to get more information through various means about the 8000 year extinct human race. Through examining 7 artifacts, we see grim snapshots of human history, their tribalism, willingness to murder, enslave, and destroy the people and environment around them.

    Multiple times through this story were my own views of current humanity reinforced. Confirmation bias lends a lot to my love of this story, but Sci-fi that isn't afraid to pull its punches is a particular delicacy for me lately (see the Three Body Problem trilogy). Each of the stories hits hard in its own way, and serves as a cautionary tale to our own race. Will we ever grow out of our bloody past into something more enlightened?

    Here's hoping.

  • Cornapecha

    Está entretenido, aunque yo lo consideraría más un relato largo que un libro corto. La humanidad y sus virtudes y defectos (las dos caras de la misma moneda) como explicación de lo que somos y lo que se supone que llegaremos a lograr.

    Tampoco entiendo que se llevase tantos premios en su día, pero no deja de ser una lectura recomendable para cualquier aficionado a la ci-fi e incluso para el que no lo sea especialmente.

  • Natt Cham

    Great. เรื่องสั้นไซไฟยอดเยี่ยม ไม่ควรพลาดด้วยประการทั้งปวง

  • Mike The Pirate

    I'm an archaeologist with a passion for paleo-anthropology. I know the history of Olduvai Gorge pretty thoroughly, having first been brought into the field by the stories and NOVA science specials about the Leakey Family and later Don Johanson. When I saw this book, I knew I had to read it, because it examines a question that all undergraduate anthropology students have to write a paper on, "What will archaeologists, 20,000 years from now be able to learn about people living in the early 21st century from out material artifacts?"
    I really liked the overarching concept Resnick came up with, and I definitely laughed inwardly at the sly comment about current archaeological methods "plundering" as opposed to "excavating" sites. I would love to be able to have a soil sifter that consumed micro-layer by micro-layer of sediment and leave noting but a lovely soil profile behind!
    Overall I found Resnick's view of the future of mankind to be intriguing and a little frightening (as it should be), but I found his view of the past to be slightly off putting.
    No, there appears to be no such thing as an entirely peaceful culture of man, and we have done many things to be ashamed of, and I am probably committing a logical fallacy, but when I study Australopithecus Afarensis or Africanus, when I learn about Homo Habilis, Erectus, and Neandethalensis, and finally, the current Sapiens, I don't want to believe that all of our history was that of a mindless predator, of sociopathic killing. Yes the ancient man in Resnick's book killed for food, but he constantly describes them as having malevolence in their eyes, or a murderous intent. And when he looks at the future, the killer purpose in unabated. The future of mankind looks bleak, and the fact that we cannot seem to learn from the past is disheartening, but we are becoming aware! And with that awareness there must be a peaceful future, there must. Every other species depicted clearly came from a peaceful society, but Resnick never stops to dwell on the learning curve that is inherent in all species of any world. And yes, I agree with Carl Sagan and Michio Kaku and Neil DeGrasse Tyson that there are other intelligent life forms out there, and that one day we will meet them.
    I ascribe to the Replacement theory of the Homo Sapien exodus out of Africa, as oppose the Multi-Regional evolution of Homo Erectus into Homo Sapien. Darwin's laws of evolution forbid that, since evolution has no set endgame and only the mutational Russian roulette of genetics, plus time and space, will alter one species into another. Having stated that, yes, Homo Sapiens now stand as the only species of man to live on this planet, but that does not have to mean that Sapiens dominated and destroyed Erectus/Ergaster and Neanderthals. We might have just been better adapted, better suited.
    Yes it is naive of me, but I feel I am a peaceful person, who may get angry, but has never felt the urge to crack open my room-mate and use his femur to murder and eat my neighbor (that is clearly a hyberbolic fallacy, I realize that).

    I greatly enjoyed this book, and read it in one sitting on a too hot summer afternoon. I love that it made me think, and disturbed me enough to do something I almost never do, namely post my opinion on the internet. I would recommend it to anyone, science fiction and science fact lovers both.

  • Shawn Deal

    This is one of the great novellas. It may be my absolutely favorite sci fi novella. This is an amazing story that swept the awards the year it came out. It has lost nothing, and is as great today as if was when it came out. A must read for sci fi fans.

  • Grace Tenkay

    This was good old fashioned science fiction. With the awards it won, I guess I was expecting better but it was satisfying.

  • Xavi

    Me gusta mucho como escribe Resnick.

  • Kathlena

    Brilliant

    I loved this story. Only wish it was longer. I'd recommend it to any one interested in human history. Yep.

  • Mike

    Man is extinct. Has been for nearly 5 centuries. But a team of alien archeologists has come to Earth. Specifically, Olduvai Gorge; to study this interesting creature that once ruled the galaxy and its worlds.

    perhaps, when we put [all the findings] together, we can finally begin to understand what it was that made Man what he was.

    Examination of seven artifacts, in this birth place of this enigmatic race, yields a stunning conclusion. Overall a good story. It was the shorter stories each artifact told about man that was truly amazing. It's no wonder this won a Nebula and Hugo.

  • Somdeb Ghose

    In what could almost be an epilogue to
    Asimov Isaac's Foundation series, barring a lack of homogeneity of sentience, humankind evolved through planet Earth and spread out into the stars, spreading its wings throughout the galaxy and, as is its wont, enslaving most of it, by force if necessary. In a universe where such necessities rise ever so often,
    Mike Resnick's
    Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge gives us a unique perspective of the circle of human life---from its birth as tailless monkeys in the Olduvai Gorge of modern day Tanzania, to its eventual escape from its birth planet it had so carelessly and unfeelingly made uninhabitable.

    It is thousands of years into the future. Humans have rose to be the preeminent species in the galaxy, the Masters of the Milky Way, if you will. Their warlike tendencies have also led to their untimely demise. Now, with the military human empire in ruins, a multi-species team of scientists land on planet Earth to piece together a picture of the early history of Homo sapiens. The team has landed near Olduvai Gorge, long thought to be the cradle of humanity. There they hope to salvage artifacts in order to fulfill their mission. Among them is He Who Views, a being with an uncanny viewpoint into an artifact's history. With his help, the team discovers, through seven viewings into Man's past, the history of arguably the most dangerous species this galaxy has ever seen. In doing so, they will uncover a secret that neither them, nor the galaxy itself, might be ready for.


    Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge won the Nebula and Hugo awards for best novella in the mid-nineties. It is not a difficult read, and can easily be finished at one go. The Kindle edition is currently about Rs 255/-, and the paperback is currently Rs 299/-. I am tempted to say that is a bit too much for a novella, but I shan't. I was drawn to this book for its title, which, in a sleepy haze, I had misread as Seven Views of Olduvai George. Suffice to say, I had, to my eternal shame, not made the obvious connection to the Leakeys. Nevertheless, I had no reason to regret my choice, as the novella made for an engaging and educational read.

  • Israel Laureano

    Magnífico, simplemente magnífico. Uno de los mejores ejemplos del uso de la ciencia ficción para mirarnos a nosotros mismos, nuestra moralidad, nuestra ambición, nuestra agresividad, nuestra iniciativa e ingenio, nuestra grandeza.

    Un grupo de arqueólogos perteneciente a una alianza extraterrestre con cinco mil años de antigüedad llega a la Tierra a investigar a los extintos humanos, especie que se expandió y dominó más de un millón de planetas durante 17 milenios. Llegan a un sitio arqueológico llamado la garganta de Olduvai (que realmente existe), donde se originó la especie humana. Uno de los arqueólogos es un ser empático y sentiente que es capaz de fusionarse mentalmente con los objetos y sentir su historia. Su cultura no usa nombres propios, pero él tiene que usar uno para conveniencia del resto del equipo, así que se hace llamar "El que Visiona" (aunque explica que realmente no son visiones, sino sentimientos, y que él está entrenado para expresarlas de forma racional).

    De esta forma nos adentramos en las visiones de siete objetos encontrados, perspectivas que van desde la aparición del Homo Sapiens en la garganta de Olduvai, la perspectiva de un esclavista y comerciante africano de fines del siglo 19, antropólogos y "colonialistas" europeos del siglo 20..., hasta un pequeño atisbo de nuestro futuro, donde todos los humanos abandonan la Tierra debido a la contaminación y un africano autodenominado "el último de los masáis" decide morir en sus tierras ancestrales y la última visión que muestra el futuro remoto de la humanidad: después de la decadencia y extinción de la cultura humana galáctica, los humanos que se quedaron en la Tierra han contravolucionado debido a la fuerte contaminación, con varios cambios anatómicos y fisiológicos después de 17 milenios, pero humanos al fin y al cabo, esperando turno evolutivo para dominar el planeta, el sistema solar y estrellas circunvecinas....

  • Ronald

    I heard great things about this novella--it won awards in the science fiction community, for example--so I was on the lookout for a copy of it when I was at the World Science Fiction convention, held in my hometown this year.

    It was originally published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (October/November 1994). The copy I bought was in _The Year's Best Science Fiction, Twelfth Annual Collection_ edited by Gardner Dozois.

    While reading Mike Resnick's novella, I was reminded of the cinematic masterpiece 2001: A Space Odyssey, for both works are science fiction on the cosmic scale and both attempt to say profound things about human existence.

    The human race expanded among the stars, ruling a cruel Empire over the intelligent beings of other worlds. The human race then went extinct, and some millennia after humankind's extinction, aliens researchers from various worlds investigate Olduvai Gorge, to learn more about this terrible, yet remarkable species.

    One of the alien researchers has a scrying-like power, that is, obtaining visions of the past from handling artifacts. Each artifact this alien handles comes from a different period in the human race, and this forms the basis for several mini-stories in this novella. Most of these mini-stories show humanity in an unflattering light, the violence and cold unconcern that humans are capable of.

  • Hakim

    An acclaimed sci-fi novella about a group of extraterrestrials doing archeology work in the Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania) seven millennia after the extinction of the human race? Hell yeah!

    I couldn't contain my excitement when I first heard about Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge - Firstly because I love throught-provoking sci-fi that explores the History of the human race from the POV of aliens, and also because it is set in Tanzania, one of the most fascinating and historically rich countries in Africa.

    "He Who Knows", a member of the exploration team, is a "Feeler". He is able to alter his structure and make his body flow around objects to be "part of them" and explore their history. Artifact after artifact, we learn many things about the lives of a few human beings throughout history.
    The concept is fine and the execution interesting. But I honestly think this would have worked a lot better as a full-length novel. I felt like the author did not explore the idea to its full extent, leaving many gaps in the story and an ending that is so frustrating, it somehow ruins the experience. This could have been so much better!

  • Jamie Rich

    Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge (Kindle Edition) by Mike Resnick

    Seven short stories that chronicle the end of Mankind, from it's beginning. If that sounds rather ambitious, it is! But the book is so well written, that you keep turning the pages. Each story does feed into the next one, and answers a lot of questions while not answering so many more. Yet, you do get context, and you can feel the history of that sacred place as the stories evolve. Beautifully done!

  • Pat Cummings

    No wonder this story won awards. It's essentially the distillation of Resnick's long list of Africa-centric fiction into a tale of Earth, set in the putative starting-place of man, and telling in a series of six vignettes, of the long rise of man in the universe.

    Not the best views of man, though, but snapshots of malevolence in a path of viciousness, murder and cannibalism, slavery and rebellion, greed and cruelty that sees a future Earth empty (perhaps) of all man's achievements. Even so, the tale is told by a research mission, aliens come to Earth to view the birthplace of mythical Man, who had conquered and plundered the galaxy in the same way he did in the vicinity of the Olduvai Gorge before his extinction.

    You may not agree with the arc of this tale, or even of the story told by Resnick's entire Out-of-Africa oeuvre. But it's hard to ignore the stellar purity and power of the way he tells it.