- Author: Sara Gruen
- Publisher: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
- Published: April 2007
- ISBN-10: 1565125606
- ISBN-13: 9781565125605
- Format: Paperback
- Copyright: 2006
- Subject: FICTION-GENERAL
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Product Description
Editorial Reviews
Gruen (Riding Lesson, not reviewed) brings to life the world of a Depression-era traveling circus.Jacob Jankowski, a retired veterinarian living out his days in an assisted-living facility, drifts in and out of his memories: Only days before graduating from vet school in 1931, young Jake learns his parents have died and left him penniless. Leaving school, he hops a train that happens to belong to the Benzini Brothers Most Spectacular Show on Earth. When the circus's owner, Uncle Al, learns Jake's educational background, he quickly hires him as the circus vet. This position allows Jake access to the various strata of circus society, from lowly crewmembers who seldom see actual money in their pay envelopes to the performers and managers who drink champagne and dress in evening wear for dinner. Jake is soon in love, both with Marlena, an equestrienne married to the head animal trainer, August, and with Rosie, an elephant who understands only Polish (which Polish-American Jake conveniently speaks). At first, August and Marlena seem happily married, but Jake soon realizes that August's charm can quickly turn to cruelty. He is charismatic but bipolar (subtle echoes of Sophie's Choice). Worse, he beats Rosie, and comes across as having no love for animals. When August assumes Marlena and Jake are fooling around-having acknowledged their feelings, they have allowed themselves only a kiss-he beats Marlena, and she leaves him. Uncle Al tries blackmailing Jake to force him to reunite Marlena with August for the sake of the circus. Jake does not comply, and one fatality leads to another until the final blowup. The leisurely recreation of the circus's daily routine is lovely and mesmerizing, even if readers have visited this world already in fiction and film, but the plot gradually bogs down in melodrama and disintegrates by its almost saccharine ending.Despite genuine talent, Gruen misses the mark. Copyright Kirkus 2006 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
Customer Reviews
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Circus Chaos
Ladies and gentleman may I present to you the most heartwarming tale of circus love told during the most depressing point in American history.” Enter the center ring a lost boy with nowhere to go, so he enters the life a circus man and then the real parade of characters start. Marlena, August, Uncle Al, Camel, Walter, Rosie and a host of other characters that paint a tale of tragedy, sorrow, hope and following your heart during a time when America needed something to look forward to, a distraction from their own dilemmas in life. Definitely a must read for anyone who likes a story that has not been told in this manner or about this subject matter, the world of the circus performer. -
A GREAT READ
Although some parts of the book will made me squirmy and uncomfortable, I found myself caring for the main characters. The flashbacks were clearly defined and detailed and I could just picture that circus in my mind. The ending was FANTASTIC and it was definitely a surprising twist. Pick this book up if you are looking for a great drama or just a peek into Depression era Americana. -
Earthy - terrific ending
I wanted to read this novel before seeing the theatrical release (as the book is ALWAYS better than the film version). The book was a bit earthy for my tastes -- lots of bodily fluids and violent scenes; but, I did care about the main characters and found myself loving the ending. Some authors know where they are going better than others with a tale and the ending can simply make you love the book. Very good read.


