Record Details
Book cover

The circus in winter

Day, Cathy. (Author).
Book  - 2004
FIC Day
1 copy / 0 on hold

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Location
Victoria Available

Browse Related Items

  • ISBN: 015101048X
  • Physical Description viii, 274 pages : illustrations
  • Edition 1st ed.
  • Publisher Orlando, Fla. ; Harcourt, [2004]

Content descriptions

General Note:
Short stories
Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 272-274).
Formatted Contents Note:
Wallace Porter, or, What it means to see the elephant -- Jennie Dixianna, or, The secret to the Spin of Death -- The last member of the Boela Tribe -- The circus house, or, The prettiest little thing in the whole goddam place -- Winnesaw, or, Nothing ever stops happening when it's over -- The Lone Star Cowboy, or, Don't fence me in -- The Jungle Goolah Boy -- The King and His Court, or, Boy meets girl, boy marries girl, the end -- Boss Man, or, The gypsies appear and poof! they're gone -- The bullhook -- Circus people, or, WLMA, your hometown music station, 1060 on the AM dial.
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 32.95

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 015101048X
The Circus in Winter
The Circus in Winter
by Day, Cathy
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Publishers Weekly Review

The Circus in Winter

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Day's debut collection spins graceful, elegant circles around the inhabitants of Lima, Ind.-especially the acrobats, clowns and circus folk of the Great Porter Circus who spent their winters there from 1884 to 1939. The poignant opening tale reveals how Wallace Porter, distraught by the death of his beloved wife, came to own his eponymous menagerie. The second, "Jennie Dixianna," introduces the dazzling, tricky Jennie, who wears her wound from her Spin of Death act "like a talisman bracelet, a secret treasure" and plots her way into Wallace's heart. Other stories tell of the young black man who plays at being an African pinhead; the son of a trainer killed by his circus elephant; the flood that devastated the circus. Thanks to finely observed details and lovely prose, each of these stories is a convincing world in miniature, filled with longing and fueled by doubt. Day, who grew up in a town like Lima and descends from circus folk herself, uses family stories, historical research and archival photographs to weave these enchantments. Though her stories often contain tragedy and violence-death in childbirth or from floodwater, cancer, circus mishap-they're also full of beauty. In "The Bullhook," Ollie, a retired clown, spends long decades with his frigid wife, waiting, armed with his father's bullhook, for death to come for him. In "Circus People," Ollie's granddaughter reflects on her fellow itinerant academics, "my latest circus family," and muses about people all over America who leave the place they grew up: "when the weather and the frequency are just right, we can all hear our hometowns talking softly to us in the back of our dreams." B&w illus.. Agent, Peter Steinberg. (July) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 015101048X
The Circus in Winter
The Circus in Winter
by Day, Cathy
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BookList Review

The Circus in Winter

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

The secret lives and loves of circus people and their descendants are revealed in these 11 linked short stories. From 1884 to 1939, the small town of Lima, Indiana, hosts the Great Porter Circus during the winter months. Wallace Porter buys the circus on the eve of his beloved wife's death, claiming he has seen the elephant. He never remarries but has a secret affair with Jennie Dixianna, the erotic acrobat who seduces men and keeps their secrets locked in a cedar box. Bascomb Bowles and his wife, Pearly, recount their sideshow adventures as pinheads, and the tales are handed down to their son, Gordon. Gordon becomes an expert on elephants and witnesses a horrific accident involving his favorite elephant and the trainer. Ollie Hofstadter, son of the elephant trainer, leaves a career as a clown after the murder of his best friend. Years later Gordon tells Ollie the true story of his father's death. A fascinating period in American history inhabited by colorful characters and told in a lively manner. --Kaite Mediatore Copyright 2004 Booklist

Syndetic Solutions - Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 015101048X
The Circus in Winter
The Circus in Winter
by Day, Cathy
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Library Journal Review

The Circus in Winter

Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Day, who spent her childhood in Peru, IN-winter home of numerous circuses-transforms her experience into a fanciful debut novel featuring elephants, clowns, and Jennie Dixianna's Spin of Death feat. Part of Harcourt's "Debut Fiction" drive. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 015101048X
The Circus in Winter
The Circus in Winter
by Day, Cathy
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Kirkus Review

The Circus in Winter

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Day's wise, warmhearted debut reveals the private lives and secret yearnings of clowns, acrobats, and pinheads as they interact with the locals in a circus's midwestern off-season home. Herself the descendant of a ticket-taker and an elephant trainer, the author integrates family history with documentary research to create a multifaceted portrait of Lima, Indiana (stand-in for her hometown, Peru). It could be any American town filled with men stuck in dead-end jobs and women looking for more from life than another baby--except for the galvanizing annual stays of the circus folk. Immigrants, misfits, dwarves, and former slaves reinvented as African royalty, they incarnate the intoxicating possibilities of freedom and pleasure beyond the edge of town, even though their lives are scarred by loss, disappointment, and tragedy. As the narrative moves forward across the 20th century in a series of stories about interconnected characters, the Great Porter Circus shuts down, its performers and roustabouts retire, and their children become dry cleaners, railroad clerks, and bank tellers. Traces of glitter and sawdust in the air add a ghostly poignancy to the later tales of small-town restlessness. "The King and His Court," a brilliant, bitter chronicle of Laura Hofstadter, whose dreams are stymied by an unwanted pregnancy, launches the second half, in which all the thematic strands come together. "There are basically two kinds of people in the world," Laura tells her daughter Jenny before vanishing. "The kind who stay are town people, and the kind who leave are circus people." Jenny becomes a modern-day circus person, an academic who moves from place to place and job to job. But when she returns for the funeral of Grandpa Ollie, a former clown, Jenny realizes, "the world is full of hometowns . . . . And just because it was hard to leave Linden Avenue in Flatbush or the Naperville city limits or Lima doesn't mean you can't ever go back." The book closes on that moving note of reconciliation and understanding. Funny and tough-minded, yet tender and touched with magic: this is a real find. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.