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Library | Call Number | Status |
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Searching... Monmouth Public Library | Fic Høeg, P. 2012 | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... McMinnville Public Library | Hoeg, P. | Searching... Unknown |
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Summary
Summary
From the author of Smilla's Sense of Snow , an epic novel about faith and the magic of everyday life.
Told from the precocious perspective of fourteen-year-old Peter, The Elephant Keepers' Children is about three siblings and how they deal with life alongside their eccentric parents. Peter's father is a vicar, his mother is an artisan, and both are equally and profoundly devout. The family lives on the (fictional) island of Finø, where people of all religious faiths coexist peacefully. Yet, nothing is at it seems.nbsp;
nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;When Peter's parents suddenly go missing, Peter and his siblings fear the worst--has their parents' relentless quest to boost church attendance finally put them in danger? Told with poignancy and humor, The Elephant Keepers' Children is a fascinating exploration of fundamentalism versus spiritual freedom, the vicissitudes of romantic and familial love, and the triumph of the human spirit.
Author Notes
Peter Hoeg, is a writer. He was born in Copenhagen, Denmark in 1957.
Hoeg's first book, The History of Danish Dreams, was published in 1988. Another book, Smilla's Sense of Snow, received the Glass Key Award from the Crime Writers of Scandinavia in 1992. The book was made into a film in 1997 starring Julia Ormond, Gabriel Bryne, and Vanessa Redgrave.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (4)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Readers who expect another taut, chilling literary thriller by the author of Smilla's Sense of Snow are in for a surprise. A thriller of sorts this is, but it's more humorous than frightening, more of a caper than a mystery, and more of a coming-of-age story than a suspense yarn. Precocious 14-year-old Peter relates the mysterious events surrounding the disappearance of his parents in a shaggy dog tale full of digressions, adolescent humor, and philosophical musings. Peter's father is the vicar of the church on tiny Fino island, off the Danish coast; his mother is the church organist and a computer whiz advising the people who are planning a Grand Synod that will bring leaders of every religion, including the pope and the Dalai lama, to Copenhagen. Eccentric in the extreme, the parents have always been mysterious to their children, but when they go missing, Peter and his older siblings, Tilte and Hans, fear that they're involved in a plot to steal religious relics. The tone throughout is jauntily farcical, including characters Bodil Hippopotamus, Alexander Flounderblood, and Anaflabia Borderrud, whose nomenclature would make Dickens blush. The action is nonstop and zany. A corpse pops in and out of a wheelchair, a castle tunnel is oiled with soft soap, chases end in dead ends, and one dangerous confrontation follows another, all ending in general mayhem. Peter is an engaging narrator; irreverent, insistently confidential, he's prone to describing metaphysical states in which one can achieve spiritual peace. He calls his parents "elephant keepers" because "they want to know what God really is." It turns out that nearly all the characters are elephant keepers of one sort or another, in Peter's estimation. Under the madcap adventure story Hoeg poses serious issues about neglected children, venal church officials, and the paths to intellectual and spiritual freedom. (Oct. 23) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Review
Part comic teenage adventure story, part intellectual debate, the best-selling Danish author's sixth novel is a shaggy-dog story with a unique vision. Featuring quirky names like Leonora Ticklepalate and Sinbad Al-Blablab; precocious, resourceful teenagers racing to save their parents; adolescent romance; and a series of adult-deceiving dodges, Heg's (The Quiet Girl, 2007, etc.) latest has a definite crossover/young adult flavor. Set on the fictitious Danish island of Fin, it introduces the Fin family: children Hans, Tilte and Peter, and parents pastor Konstantin and his inventor wife, Clara. This couple disappeared once before, having developed some kind of spiritual fraud system involving his sermons and her special effects, but the children have indulged their parents' history of swindling because they are "elephant keepers," containing something bigger than themselves, namely their yearning for God. Now, the two are missing again and Peter and Tilte must go to their rescue. An endless sequence of whimsical episodes ensues as the children give social services the slip, con their way off the island and head toward a Grand Synod of faiths where they suspect their parents are planning an equally grand theft of religious artifacts. Heg has an endless menu of oddities to stir into his story; whether thriller, fantasy or disquisition on spiritual belief, love and parenting does successfully invent an inexhaustible landscape all its own. This self-indulgent, idiosyncratic and immensely long story will either charm its readers into submission or utterly exhaust their patience.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
New York Review of Books Review
It can't be easy growing up exceptional in an unexceptional village on an island in Denmark, particularly if one's parents are high-rolling swindlers in pillar-of-community disguise. Three whip-smart siblings, Peter, Tilte and Hans, display an inherited talent for flimflammery when their dissembling mother and clergyman father (who display an unseemly fondness for Maseratis and mink coats) suspiciously drop from sight for the second time in two years. The ensuing cat-and-mouse pits these inexhaustibly resourceful teenagers against a flamboyant mob of interested parties, including a preening count who runs a rehab center, a punch-drunk sex worker with Greek-goddess pretensions and an imam with thespian leanings. The lunacy of a spiritually addicted culture motors this sober-hearted screwball comedy from the author of "Smilla's Sense of Snow." Your willingness to buy into his sideshow of madcap characters with goofy names like Leonora Tickle-palate and Bodil Hippopotamus may depend on your susceptibility to the hyper-precocious narration of young Peter. A fount of grandiloquent observations and windy circumlocutions, he conveys the cunning of a middle-aged novelist playing at being a perceptive 14-year-old, and the earnestness of a 14-year-old who seems doomed to a life of writing.
Library Journal Review
This quirky, philosophical Danish tale concerns two children, 14-year-old Peter and his older and very mature sister, Tilte, who go on the run from the authorities and various other eccentric and fancifully named characters following their parents' mysterious disappearance. The parents work in their hometown church on a fictional island off the coast of Denmark, where miracles may have occurred during the father's sermons; lately, they have become involved with shady business dealings as well. Piecing together clues left behind, the children learn that a major religious conference is scheduled to take place in Copenhagen and that a theft of priceless religious artifacts may be in the works. Peter and Tilte have a precocious philosophical bent, evidently having spent countless hours researching mysticism and spiritual theology, notions of which are sprinkled liberally throughout young Peter's first-person narrative. -VERDICT This is an enjoyable and interesting novel, but the appeal may be limited, since it is densely written and requires an effort. Hoeg, the author of the brilliant Smilla's Sense of Snow, has adopted a comic voice, and one wonders at times how accurately the translation has preserved his original intentions. [See Prepub Alert, 6/15/12.]-Jim Coan, SUNY at Oneonta Lib. (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.