Schrefer, Eliot. Endangered. Scholastic/Grolier 264p $17.99 978-0-545-16576-1 2012 ms/hs VG-BN Realistic fiction
This story
starts in Kinshasa, the capital of the Congo, when Sophie, a young Congolese girl, comes to visit her mother for the summer. During her trip to her mother’s sanctuary for bonobos, she buys an
orphan bonobo from a peddler who is mistreating the young bonobo. This action on her part does
not make her mother very happy because it is against governmental laws. However, before things are
able to get sorted out, Sophie and Otto (the
bonobo) become very much attached to each other, and a country-wide
revolution erupts.
The political unrest starts after Sophie’s mother leaves to reintroduce some bonobos into a wildlife sanctuary. The sanctuary is attacked by revolutionists and the servants are all killed. Sophie takes refuge inside the bonobos’ electrified enclosure until the solar-powered setup fails. At this point Sophie is forced to leave, entering the crosshairs of the conflict, “where bullet holes have bullet holes”. She comes face-to-face with what one must do “to keep safe, to eat, and to live”.
This is a story about the problems of a third-world country and the love that encompasses humans (in this case, Sophie) and animals.
Note: “Throughout this book, ‘Congo’ refers to the Democratic Republic of Congo (the country formerly known as ‘Zaire’), not neighboring Congo-Brazzaville.
Congo-Fiction,
Human-animal bonding-Fiction, Revolution-Fiction --Linda
McNeil
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