Skip to main content

AN ELEPHANT IN THE GARDEN by Michael Morpurgo


copyright date: June 2011
primarily marketed for: intermediate readers (5th grade and up)

Three things I cannot get enough of are:
1.     books that take place during WWII (there is so much to know about this important time in our history that these stories never get old)
2.     books told from multiple viewpoints (I love the layers of story this reveals)
AND
3.     books about elephants (I am in love with these emotional creatures)

An Elephant in the Garden by Michael Morpurgo (author of War Horse) satisfies my craving for all three kinds of books. 

The story is initially told from the point of view of a nurse whose son comes with her to work at an assisted living facility.  Her son, Karl, bounds into the room of one of her most challenging patients.  Upon meeting Karl, the patient begins talking about an elephant that lived in her garden when she was a young girl.  The nurse dismisses her talk as the nonsensical words of fading mind.  However, Karl takes her words to heart.

Later that evening, he convinces his mother that perhaps there is truth in the patient’s words, and she begins to doubt her own skepticism.  So, the next day, when her son once again bounds into the room and the patient begins her story, the nurse and Karl both hang on her every word. 

And so did I.  And so will you, reader! 

Although her story is largely a fictional story that Morpurgo created, in the author’s note he explains the many truths on which it is based. 

During World War II, zoo animals were ordered to be destroyed in the case that bombing began to prevent the destruction that wild animals on the loose might cause when their cages were destroyed by bombs.  In a case like this (although in other setting completely), there is a story of a baby elephant that was taken home and cared for by a zookeeper.  Morpurgo put these ideas together with the story of another woman’s journey from Dresden during WWII and spun the story of An Elephant in the Garden

Although the animal plays an important role in the story, I think this is really a story about war and the effect it has on humans and human relationships.  It is beautifully told.  Although it is written for younger readers, there is a lot of depth to be found amongst the lines of this story. 

If you enjoy war stories, you are interested in reading about World War II, you like books with elephants, you appreciate books written from multiple perspectives, or you are human, you are sure to love this book!

Reading Threads:

Comments

  1. I've read this, Christy, & loved it. I've seen that others thought it was a little unrealistic, but still I liked the story it told. Thanks for bringing it back up again!

    ReplyDelete
  2. This looks wonderful! I'll have to pick up a copy. : )

    Speaking of WWII, did you find my "drop" on your front porch?

    j

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

THE FAULT IN OUR STARS by John Green

You knew it was coming.  How could I not share?  EVERYONE MUST READ JOHN GREEN’S LATEST WORK OF ART: THE FAULT IN OUR STARS .  Throughout my life (well, at least from 4 th grade, when I was introduced to Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl until now, the 7 th month of my 34 th year of noticing the universe) the name ‘Augustus’ immediately evoked an image of a chubby, stubborn, chocolate-loving boy, doted upon by his mother, with the last name of Gloop.  The name ‘Augustus’ made me giggle about this character’s gluttonous follies inside the chocolate factory. Until reading John Green’s beloved new book The Fault in Our Stars . From now on, the name ‘Augustus’ will forever evoke an entirely different image and an entirely different set of emotions.  A casually hot, lean, limping ‘Augustus Waters’ has forever replaced the ‘Augustus’ of the book I treasured as a child—an unlit cigarette held loosely between his lips.  A longing sigh ...

A MONSTER CALLS by Patrick Ness (inspired by an idea from Siobhan Dowd and illustrated by Jim Kay)

“Every time the monster moved, Conor could hear the creak of wood groaning and yawning in the monster’s huge body.” In her review for the New York Times , Jessica Bruder refers to A Monster Calls as, “A story that lodges in your bones and stays there.”  This, I believe, is an understatement.  I am afraid my words, mere pixels on the screen, cannot begin to honor how truly special this book is. From his words in the Author’s Note, Patrick Ness held me spellbound.  Siobhan Dowd had developed an idea for a book about a monster and a boy whose mom had cancer.  Breast cancer cut her life short and she was unable to finish her story.  Patrick Ness, when asked to craft something from the seed of a story Dowd left behind said, “…the thing about ideas is that they grow other ideas.”  And so, A Monster Calls was born out of Dowd’s seed and Ness’s nurturing. I suppose a book with that kind of conception was bound to be incredible, but I am sure not even ...

EXTREMELY LOUD AND INCREDIBLY CLOSE by Jonathan Safran Foer

copyright date: 2005 primarily marketed for: adults Extremely Loud andIncredibly Close is the grown-up book that made me fall in love with grown-up books again.   Or, at least made me open to reading them after years of sticking solely to young adult literature (aka Good Literature).    This book arrived on my doorstep as a surprise gift from a friend I’ve known since second grade, which made it that much sweeter.    I can’t decide whether to be excited or disappointed that this book is being turned into a movie now.   Everyone needs to know this story- it is incredible!   I just can’t imagine the movie possibly doing the depth and layers and format of the story justice.   One of my favorite qualities of the book is the way pages of images are smattered throughout the story. The images are jarring the way that they interrupt the story, and yet they are perfect in the way that they enhance the story—deepen my thinking as a reader. ...