Matt's Reviews > Water for Elephants
Water for Elephants
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April 24, 2008 edition of Coastal View News
The glitz and grit, glam and sham of depression-era circus life limps along in Sara Gruen鈥檚 鈥淲ater for Elephants鈥� with little aid from her shoddy prose, predictable plot and underdeveloped metaphor. Although the book has a flashy appearance and is easily digested, it offers less nutritional value than promised.
When his parents suddenly and tragically die, Jacob Jankowski quits veterinarian school at Cornell University just before graduation and finds himself aboard a circus train. The Great Depression is in full swing, jobs are scarce and the likelihood of Jacob being offered a position aboard the second-rate Benzini Brothers circus is even slimmer. Luckily the circus is in need of a veterinarian and Al, the greedy and miserly ringmaster of the circus, decides not to pass up the opportunity to underpay his 鈥淐ornell-trained鈥� vet.
Jacob quickly earns his keep by maintaining the menagerie, but because his position is awkwardly located somewhere in-between the working crew and the performers, he grapples with the sharp divide between labor and the elite. He works with both classes, and thus appreciates the benefits of associating with the higher society while at the same time sympathizes with the less-fortunate workers.
Ultimately it is two sets of relationships that define Jacob鈥檚 story, a story which 鈥減arallels the Biblical story of Jacob.鈥� The first defining relationship is between Jacob and Marlena, who is a performer in the circus and wife to August, a bipolar and oft-violent man. Jacob is enamored with Marlena from the moment he sets eyes on her, but his up-and-down relationship with August results in repeated attempts by Jacob to suppress his urge to act on his desires. Only once does Jacob fail to control himself, and although August is not justified in suspecting the truth of Jacob鈥檚 feelings, his on-again off-again rage puts everyone in a pickle.
Meanwhile, Jacob is also fostering a second relationship, this one with an apparently obstinate bull elephant named Rosie, who is purchased by Al when another circus goes under. Jacob鈥檚 natural affection for animals and his Polish background leave him uniquely equipped to handle this once passed-over beast and to turn her into a star.
As the behind-the-scenes drama in the Benzini Brothers circus is developed, the perspective in the novel switches back and forth between Jacob in the central story and Jacob as an old man of 鈥�90. Or 93. One or the other.鈥� The younger Jacob is caring and cordial, while the older Jacob is cranky and more obstinate than a thousand elephants.
Gruen sets her story in a depression-era circus, a second-rate one at that, in an attempt to redeem the freak show, the workingman and the downtrodden; to show that the fine line between illusion and reality is finer than most people imagine. The book described by one critic as an 鈥渆scapist fairytale鈥� embraces the impulse to flee the dingy world of reality to participate in all that is glittery.
These may be interesting ideas, but in 鈥淲ater for Elephants鈥� Gruen fails to develop them to a point of profundity. One need not have a penchant for self-spoiling to predict what is going to happen next in this book, with the unintentional red herrings鈥攖he death of Jacob鈥檚 parents and the story of two forgotten comrades鈥攆alling into nothingness. The prose is pedestrian and the plot is implausible in the most obnoxious sort of way. Astute readers might not doubt whether the events in this novel could possibly develop, but they should doubt whether such is the way people think, act and interact.
The redeeming quality of this book is a fanciful look at circus life the way it used to be. There must be something intrinsically interesting in the big top鈥攖he fat lady, the elephant and the clowns鈥攂ecause the intrigue in 鈥淲ater for Elephants鈥� does not come from within.
The glitz and grit, glam and sham of depression-era circus life limps along in Sara Gruen鈥檚 鈥淲ater for Elephants鈥� with little aid from her shoddy prose, predictable plot and underdeveloped metaphor. Although the book has a flashy appearance and is easily digested, it offers less nutritional value than promised.
When his parents suddenly and tragically die, Jacob Jankowski quits veterinarian school at Cornell University just before graduation and finds himself aboard a circus train. The Great Depression is in full swing, jobs are scarce and the likelihood of Jacob being offered a position aboard the second-rate Benzini Brothers circus is even slimmer. Luckily the circus is in need of a veterinarian and Al, the greedy and miserly ringmaster of the circus, decides not to pass up the opportunity to underpay his 鈥淐ornell-trained鈥� vet.
Jacob quickly earns his keep by maintaining the menagerie, but because his position is awkwardly located somewhere in-between the working crew and the performers, he grapples with the sharp divide between labor and the elite. He works with both classes, and thus appreciates the benefits of associating with the higher society while at the same time sympathizes with the less-fortunate workers.
Ultimately it is two sets of relationships that define Jacob鈥檚 story, a story which 鈥減arallels the Biblical story of Jacob.鈥� The first defining relationship is between Jacob and Marlena, who is a performer in the circus and wife to August, a bipolar and oft-violent man. Jacob is enamored with Marlena from the moment he sets eyes on her, but his up-and-down relationship with August results in repeated attempts by Jacob to suppress his urge to act on his desires. Only once does Jacob fail to control himself, and although August is not justified in suspecting the truth of Jacob鈥檚 feelings, his on-again off-again rage puts everyone in a pickle.
Meanwhile, Jacob is also fostering a second relationship, this one with an apparently obstinate bull elephant named Rosie, who is purchased by Al when another circus goes under. Jacob鈥檚 natural affection for animals and his Polish background leave him uniquely equipped to handle this once passed-over beast and to turn her into a star.
As the behind-the-scenes drama in the Benzini Brothers circus is developed, the perspective in the novel switches back and forth between Jacob in the central story and Jacob as an old man of 鈥�90. Or 93. One or the other.鈥� The younger Jacob is caring and cordial, while the older Jacob is cranky and more obstinate than a thousand elephants.
Gruen sets her story in a depression-era circus, a second-rate one at that, in an attempt to redeem the freak show, the workingman and the downtrodden; to show that the fine line between illusion and reality is finer than most people imagine. The book described by one critic as an 鈥渆scapist fairytale鈥� embraces the impulse to flee the dingy world of reality to participate in all that is glittery.
These may be interesting ideas, but in 鈥淲ater for Elephants鈥� Gruen fails to develop them to a point of profundity. One need not have a penchant for self-spoiling to predict what is going to happen next in this book, with the unintentional red herrings鈥攖he death of Jacob鈥檚 parents and the story of two forgotten comrades鈥攆alling into nothingness. The prose is pedestrian and the plot is implausible in the most obnoxious sort of way. Astute readers might not doubt whether the events in this novel could possibly develop, but they should doubt whether such is the way people think, act and interact.
The redeeming quality of this book is a fanciful look at circus life the way it used to be. There must be something intrinsically interesting in the big top鈥攖he fat lady, the elephant and the clowns鈥攂ecause the intrigue in 鈥淲ater for Elephants鈥� does not come from within.
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Reading Progress
April 2, 2008
– Shelved
Started Reading
April 10, 2008
– Shelved as:
contemporary-literature
April 10, 2008
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Finished Reading
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Suzanne
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rated it 3 stars
Apr 27, 2009 11:28AM

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Yes, he is cranky in the 'present" setting but he's alos older, lost his wife, is no longer a part of the circus and it seems his family doesn't really give a damn about him so what is there to really be happy or look forward to?
I think his crankiness is quite funny and actually adds to the story.
It's a literary read without much of the outer dialogue but much more inner monologue and a lot of the story is about seeing Jacob develop and figure out who he is after leaving school and losing his parents.
All in all I loved the book.