Water for Elephants: A Novel

by Sara Gruen | Literature & Fiction |
ISBN: 1565124995 Global Overview for this book
Registered by MadameUrushiol of Milford, New Hampshire USA on 1/1/2007
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3 journalers for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by MadameUrushiol from Milford, New Hampshire USA on Monday, January 1, 2007
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Jacob Jankowski says: "I am ninety. Or ninety-three. One or the other." At the beginning of Water for Elephants, he is living out his days in a nursing home, hating every second of it. His life wasn't always like this, however, because Jacob ran away and joined the circus when he was twenty-one. It wasn't a romantic, carefree decision, to be sure. His parents were killed in an auto accident one week before he was to sit for his veterinary medicine exams at Cornell. He buried his parents, learned that they left him nothing because they had mortgaged everything to pay his tuition, returned to school, went to the exams, and didn't write a single word. He walked out without completing the test and wound up on a circus train. The circus he joins, in Depression-era America, is second-rate at best. With Ringling Brothers as the standard, Benzini Brothers is far down the scale and pale by comparison.

Water for Elephants is the story of Jacob's life with this circus. Sara Gruen spares no detail in chronicling the squalid, filthy, brutish circumstances in which he finds himself. The animals are mangy, underfed or fed rotten food, and abused. Jacob, once it becomes known that he has veterinary skills, is put in charge of the "menagerie" and all its ills. Uncle Al, the circus impresario, is a self-serving, venal creep who slaps people around because he can. August, the animal trainer, is a certified paranoid schizophrenic whose occasional flights into madness and brutality often have Jacob as their object. Jacob is the only person in the book who has a handle on a moral compass and as his reward he spends most of the novel beaten, broken, concussed, bleeding, swollen and hungover. He is the self-appointed Protector of the Downtrodden, and... he falls in love with Marlena, crazy August's wife. Not his best idea.

The most interesting aspect of the book is all the circus lore that Gruen has so carefully researched. She has all the right vocabulary: grifters, roustabouts, workers, cooch tent, rubes, First of May, what the band plays when there's trouble, Jamaican ginger paralysis, life on a circus train, set-up and take-down, being run out of town by the "revenooers" or the cops, and losing all your hooch. There is one glorious passage about Marlena and Rosie, the bull elephant, that truly evokes the magic a circus can create. It is easy to see Marlena's and Rosie's pink sequins under the Big Top and to imagine their perfect choreography as they perform unbelievable stunts. The crowd loves it--and so will the reader. The ending is absolutely ludicrous and really quite lovely. --Valerie Ryan

From Publishers Weekly
With its spotlight on elephants, Gruen's romantic page-turner hinges on the human-animal bonds that drove her debut and its sequel (Riding Lessons and Flying Changes)—but without the mass appeal that horses hold. The novel, told in flashback by nonagenarian Jacob Jankowski, recounts the wild and wonderful period he spent with the Benzini Brothers Most Spectacular Show on Earth, a traveling circus he joined during the Great Depression. When 23-year-old Jankowski learns that his parents have been killed in a car crash, leaving him penniless, he drops out of Cornell veterinary school and parlays his expertise with animals into a job with the circus, where he cares for a menagerie of exotic creatures[...] He also falls in love with Marlena, one of the show's star performers—a romance complicated by Marlena's husband, the unbalanced, sadistic circus boss who beats both his wife and the animals Jankowski cares for. Despite her often clichéd prose and the predictability of the story's ending, Gruen skillfully humanizes the midgets, drunks, rubes and freaks who populate her book. (May 26)
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Journal Entry 2 by MadameUrushiol from Milford, New Hampshire USA on Wednesday, December 5, 2007
Off in the mail to AtHomeGoddess. It was on her wish list...

Journal Entry 3 by AtHomeGoddess from Fresno, California USA on Saturday, January 5, 2008
The generosity of BCers never fails to amaze me! Would you believe this is the 2nd copy of this book that I received as a surprise RABCK?! Must be that wonderful ol' giving spirit of the holiday season!

I will be finding a BCer who also had this on their wish list and sending it on to keep the kindness going.

Journal Entry 4 by Infantrywife101 from Plano, Texas USA on Saturday, February 23, 2008
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS RABCK!!!!

Journal Entry 5 by Infantrywife101 from Plano, Texas USA on Thursday, July 31, 2008
This book was on my book club list when I joined over a year ago. I never got to read it, and then recieved it as a RABCK and it was great! VERY brutal in some parts about the animals, but the ending truly did make me smile. It kept me interested and enthralled and I would recommend it to anyone with an interest in the circus.
THANK YOU SO MUCH! I plan to release this to 300dogs here in town as a RABCK along with Nineteen MInutes, of which she is next on the list in said bookray.

:)

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