This book felt like a dish you order and it turns out to be something else then you expected, perhaps not a bad dish but you never quite let go of that feeling of disappointment. I picked the call of distant mammoths for exactly what the title promised, the disappearing of ice age mammals and yes those are included in the book, but they have to take a backseat to several other subject broached by Peter D Ward.
This book is as much or even more so, a book about the Mesozoic extinction, a debate on the (destructive) capabilities of mankind today, evolution and the place and role of paleontologists in society. It felt at times as if Ward got carried away while free writing and could not delete the albeit at times interesting little side notes he had added to his main text. I also have to say that book is accessible, has some memorable points and one liners that reveal its intent to be a mass audience book. in itself I have nothing against this, but in his attempt to broach so many subjects and near the end of the book trying to get people aware of how precarious the situation for elephants are, he somewhat loses sight what he set ought to do; explaining why ice age mammals disappeared.
Let me rephrase that, he does go in lengthy detail on theories how ice age mammals disappeared, but 90% of it is north america. Again, that is not what the title or book description says it will discuss. Yes north american Mammoths and mastodons (who get by far the most attention) are interesting and the debat whether mankind or climate change made them vanish is interesting; but so are saber tooth cats, European cave Hyena or ice age wild horses. None of these get even a slim analysis beyond the summary of animals that existed alongside those majestic mammoths, even the mammoths of Siberia and Europa have to fight for a scrap of attention.
I would also have liked a chapter that truly went into detail when it came to describing the ice age fauna and flora of north america during the ice age. That alongside the period of extinction is scattered all over the book alongside new arguments for the three sides in the debate (climate or humans/perhaps a bit of both). I get he wants to show how new arguments and new data are intertwined but I was not that fond of it, that he saved his smoking gun argument (he even calls that chapter the smoking gun) for near the end of the book left me with a mixed feeling. Yes it allows a reader to switch back and forth through the book siding with one side or another as new info and theories are being fed one bit at the time (first discoveries, the kill curve, preserved flora remains and so on); but on the other hand I did have a "well that was all a bit pointless" feeling. At the very end you get such a strong case for the mankind did it side (using fossilized tusks of mammoths to determine their health, body mass and reproduction which leaves marks on the development of tusks) that all of which became before nearly felt like a waste of time. I guess that is why he wanted to put so much of his book's span on the debate on dinosaur extinction (that has a tenacious group of people who will not accept the significant impact (baduum wish) of the meteor that gave the deathblow to the reptile world) as if to say; these climate people are on the losing side and will end up like those anti meteor people, unlike me, on the wrong side of the debate.
So in the end, I can't say it is not an enjoyable book, but it is somewhat misleading at the onset. All the side stories, the second and third objectives, the links with modern life (including lengthy moments of his life as when he made a visit to New Orleans for a conference) made the original subject suffer. I really disliked, for it made the book too silly and popular, the entire time machine image. Let's go back in time and see what the world looked like and at the end of the book he off course jumps forward a hundred years to discover all elephants died off and their call has joined the mammoths (yes your message has been heard loud and clear). If he had only used this gimmick to get his point across, it could have been passable, but he spends a sizable amount of time setting up this evolution board game to show how lucky, chance oriented evolution is. Again in itself fine, but it all took away time that I believe should have been spent on setting a stage of ice age world in which the extinction took place this book so eagerly wants to explain.
So yes, even tough it is a pleasant read with a lot of material to digest; it still fails it original mission. The same way a good dish you did not expect still leaves to desire, this book leaves you a bit disappointed if you had truly heard the call of distant mammoths.