cover image Ivory's Ghosts: The White Gold of History and the Fate of Elephants

Ivory's Ghosts: The White Gold of History and the Fate of Elephants

John Frederick Walker, . . Atlantic Monthly, $25 (304pp) ISBN 978-0-87113-995-5

With a mix of appalled testimony and meticulous research, Walker (A Certain Curve of Horn ) traces the story of ivory from Paleolithic times to the present and the devastation the ivory trade has wrought on African and Asian elephants—by one estimate, 2.8 million were killed between 1850 and 1914. At the height of the 19th century craze for ivory—which included a savage dependence on slaves to transport tusks to African trading centers—it was used for sacred artifacts, piano keys, pistol grips, toothpicks and billiard balls. By the 1980s, poaching threatened the last herds in Africa, leading to a worldwide ban on international trade, but with unintended consequences from laws so restrictive no ivory could be sold at all. By 1994, nine African nations had stockpiled 100 tons of “pickup” ivory, harvested from elephants that had died a natural death. This “great gift that the elephant leaves at the end of its life,” writes Walker, should be sold to help conserve endangered herds, a controversial proposal that spotlights the deep divide between ardent supporters of continuing the ban and conservationists concerned about the future of the elephant, now “more important than the treasure it supplies.” 16 pages of illus. (Jan.)