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Book reviews: Twenty-One Elephants and Still Standing, by April Jones Prince

by Moe Zilla

Created on: March 02, 2009

In 1883 the Brooklyn Bridge was completed, and the magic moment is captured in a story by April Jones Prince. "For 14 years they'd watched it rise," she writes, "the cities' schoolteachers, bankers, cabinetmakers, pointing and gawking, ooohing and aaahing..." The woven steel cables are "graceful and strong, like stairways straight to the stars." Prince describes the achievement with a kind of poetry, and she spins a good story out of the people's reactions.




"New York and Brooklyn, dwarfed by its arches, knew the future had entered their sights." Fireworks are launched for hours, and "flags waved, bands played, kids hoorayed before bigwigs in top hats galore." But Prince knows that the real excitement comes from the people moved by the event. She imagines them thinking about the things they'll do, and marveling at its architecture in the streets below.




"But so long and so lofty, its cable so new - some had to ask, Is it safe?"




It's Prince's first book for Houghton Mifflin, but she's helped along with some suitably grand illustrations that were contributed by Francois Roca. He draws platforms crossing over paddle-wheel steamships, and a boy sailing under the bridge as fireworks explode in the sky. But when questions are raised about safety, the bridge is shown in the shadow of a cloud. Sunlight shines on the river and it lights up the clouds - but the Brooklyn Bridge is a dark silhouette. "Who wants to bargain THIS bridge won't dance in the wind?"




"Both the bridge and [P.T.] Barnum embodied the audacious, can-do spirit of the latter 1800s," Prince writes on the book's jacket, "and their coming together seemed a perfect, outrageous window on the times." Her book describes the famous circus owner as "larger than life," a "world-famous showman" whose ideas "weren't contained by a tent." And Prince shares the wonderful story of a May evening in 1884, when Jumbo the elephant marched down Broadway, past City Hall, "past mothers, fathers, and children."




It's a true story, and it's one worth remembering. (To verify the story, author Prince "traveled to museums and libraries, scrolled through old newspapers, viewed documentaries, scoured books old and new, and called upon experts.") All of P.T. Barnum's elephants filed onto the Brooklyn Bridge - twenty-one elephants in all. And when they came out the other side, it's P.T. Barnum that assure the crowd that the bridge must be sound.




As white fireworks lit up the sky.

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