From Publishers Weekly
The animal residents of the Central Park Children's Zoo are not the only creatures gently scrutinized in Dolnick's charming debut, a light bildungsroman about shoveling goat poop and growing up. Henry Elinsky, helplessly ordinary, has flunked out after his first semester of college and is living at home in Chevy Chase, Md. Besieged by his father's unrelenting optimism, his mother's unhappiness and his uncle's hypersensitivity, Henry joins his older brother in New York City and takes a job as a keeper at the Children's Zoo. Henry's time in the city is a whirlwind of self-discovery: he cleans animal pens, receives the testy treatment from his brother's rich, bitchy girlfriend and realizes his would-be career as a saxophonist isn't all that promising. Henry also revels in his unrequited passion for young aspiring writer Margaret, even though he knows he and Margaret cannot be together. It takes a family crisis and a monumental error of judgment at the zoo to nudge Henry onward. Dolnick can capture in one surprisingly lucid phrase the essence of a situation, though his narrator's benign travails may not resonate with readers not of the 18–25 demographic. This is very much a young man's book; it will be interesting to see what Dolnick does next.
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Dolnick sets his début novel in the Central Park Childrens Zoo, where he briefly worked, and where his protagonist, Henry, finds employment, after flunking out of college. The zoo, a rich seam of metaphor, serves as the backdrop to Henrys coming-of-age drama. Staying in the Manhattan apartment of his brothers rich girlfriend, he becomes infatuated with a beautiful tease, while negotiating tensions with his ill-matched, empty-nester parents. The charactersgoatish, sheepish, and bovine by turnsstand as both keepers and kept, a problem illustrated when Henry frees his favorite goat for a walk through Central Park and it runs away. As a writer, Dolnick seems to share some of his protagonists immaturity, but he demonstrates an engaging lightness of touch.
Copyright © 2007
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--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.