Despite the author's claim that Julie represents a new challenge to Ishmael, the little girl is no Phaedrus, and in any case the gorilla hardly seems to need an interlocutor. The simian scholar tries to distill thousands of years of human wisdom and experience into a few simplistic preachments and parables. Must have an earnest desire to save the world."" So begins a 300-page lecture by a silverback gorilla who expounds his theories on the suicidal plunge of contemporary culture (the Takers) and his belief that learning from tribal cultures (the Leavers) is our only path to survival. In this predictable sequel, disenchanted 12-year-old Julie Gerchak responds to a classified ad: ""Teacher seeks pupil. The book featured a wise, telepathic gorilla who engaged in Socratic dialogue with a young man, teaching him how he could help save the world from its self-destructive path. Out of 2500 entries worldwide, Quinn's quirky first novel, Ishmael, won the prize (which after some controversy, was never awarded again). In 1989, Ted Turner offered a $500,000 fellowship for a work of fiction that offered positive solutions to global problems.
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