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The Bestiary [Hardcover]

Nicholas Christopher

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Book Description

Jun 26 2007
From “a writer of remarkable gifts,” “Borges with emotional weight, comes a tale that is at once a fantastical historical mystery, a haunting love story, and a glimpse into the uncanny—the quest for a long-lost book detailing the animals left off Noah’s Ark.

Xeno Atlas grows up in the Bronx, his Sicilian grandmother’s strange stories of animal spirits his only escape from the legacy of his mother’s early death and his stern father’s long absences as a common seaman. Shunted off to an isolated boarding school, with his father’s activities abroad and the source of his newfound wealth grown increasingly mysterious, Xeno turns his early fascination with animals into a personal obsession: his search for the Caravan Bestiary. This medieval text, lost for eight hundred years, supposedly details the animals not granted passage on the Ark—griffins, hippogriffs, manticores, and basilisks—the vanished remnants of a lost world sometimes glimpsed in the shadowy recesses of our own.

Xeno’s quest takes him from the tenements of New York to the jungles of Vietnam to the ancient libraries of Europe—but it is only by riddling out his own family secrets that he can hope to find what he is looking for. A story of panoramic scope and intellectual suspense, The Bestiary is ultimately a tale of heartbreak and redemption.

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: The Dial Press (Jun 26 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385337361
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385337366
  • Product Dimensions: 22.6 x 15.5 x 3.6 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 499 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #986,382 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

In Christopher's magical fifth novel, a sympathetic history teacher takes an interest in quiet, studious Xeno Atlas, who has developed a burning interest in real and imaginary animals. I first heard of the Caravan Bestiary when I was fifteen years old, and it changed the course of my life, Xeno declares. The young man undertakes a quest to find the ancient manuscript, which describes animals left off Noah's Ark (including the Catoblepas, a white bird with divining powers) and was assumed lost many years ago. The search entails an around-the-world journey, wherein Xeno learns the answers to long-standing family mysteries, uncovers a wealth of lost knowledge and finds true love with his best friend's sister, the lovely Lena Moretti. Christopher (A Trip to the Stars) also saddles his protagonist with a dead mother; a mysterious, perpetually grieving, peripatetic father; a shape-shifting shamanistic grandmother; and a lonely, troubled childhood. His evocative prose yields a narrative loaded with fascinating arcana and intriguing characters. (July)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Influenced by his grandmother's fanciful bedtime stories, punctuated by realistic animal sounds, Xeno Atlas is fascinated by animal lore and mythological beasts. A lonely boy stuck in a dysfunctional-mold-breaking family—a dead mother, an estranged uncle, a shape-shifting grandmother, and an uncommunicative, absentee father—Xeno eschews childhood pastimes, pursuing instead scholarly clues to an ancient Caravan Bestiary: an illuminated record of animals denied passage on Noah's Ark. Over time, Xeno increasingly identifies with these misunderstood, extinct, and imaginary animals (even creating some of his own), preferring dragons and hippogryphs to beastly humans. His adult travels take him full circle to his Cretan ancestral roots and to unexpected answers, finally tying up the story's vexatious loose ends. Despite the author's signature use of magic realism, tantalizing references to a rich spiritual plane, a wounded hero, and a lost manuscript, the novel's potential falls somewhat flat under the weight of its leisurely pace and overabundant detail, lacking the emotive power of Byatt's Possession or the atmospheric tension of Zafon's Shadow of the Wind. Still, readers of those and similar works will find some satisfaction here. Baker, Jennifer

Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 3.6 out of 5 stars  20 reviews
19 of 22 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing July 7 2007
By KP - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Caveat: "A Trip to the Stars" was the first Nicholas Christopher book I read. I loved it. I've since read his other fiction works, and I've been disappointed by all in comparison. The Bestiary is no different.

The Bestiary gets off to a good start-- Xeno's empty and lonely childhood is haunting and the tension building in his relationships with those around him is palpable. I kept waiting for something to happen. Nothing did. By the middle of the book, I'd just about run out of steam. I stuck with it to find out what happened, and was unimpressed by the ending. This was a book I finished just to finish, not because I was compelled to find out what happened or even particularly cared.

I also felt occasionally as if there were a private joke I simply wasn't privy to. In an otherwise serious novel, a Maine private prep school teacher named Cletis? Christopher also seems to rely on numerous symbols to communicate or hint at some message. Unfortunately, they seem like sentences with only beginnings and no end: they seem to be meaningful, but what they mean is none too clear to me.

Over all, this book got off to a great start, but sputtered to a fairly anemic end.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The first of his books I read Dec 1 2007
By Deb - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I notice that other reviewers liked the first christopher novel they read the best; That was true for me with this book. Beautifully written, a compelling mystery and fascinating characters. After I finished Bestiary, I read all his earlier novels which I enjoyed, but not quite as much as The Bestiary (Franklin Flyer was my second favorite. There is a simplicity that I really liked to this book). Strongly recommend Christopher,especially if you are partial to magical realism.
7 of 9 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Animal atlas Jun 15 2008
By Linda Pagliuco - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Xeno Atlas has grown up missing both his mother (dead) and his father (physically and emotionally distant.) If it weren't for his rather mystical grandma, their practical, supportive housekeeper, and the welcoming family of a friend, he might not have turned out so well. For solace, Xeno immerses himself in the fanciful stories of animals told to him, and when introduced to the medieval bestiaries by his his teacher, becomes obsessed with finding the long lost Caravan Bestiary, which has eluded scholars and historians for centuries.

Unfortunately, it takes almost half of the book for Xeno to set off on his quest. The first part is devoted to his emotionally deprived childhood and a shorter segment about his Vietnam War service. When he finally is able to get his act together, the narrative, while competently written, dwells mostly, and rather clinically, on description of Xeno's research efforts. While The Bestiary tells an interesting story, incorporating mythical and religious detail, the lyrical, poetic aspects so highly praised in some reviews was not its outstanding feature, in my experience.

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