| Mormon Literature & Creative Arts Database

Mormon Literature & Creative Arts

  • Home
  • Browse Works
  • Browse People
  • Contribute
  • About

The Thieves of Summer

Linda Sillitoe

Salt Lake City, Utah: Signature Books, June 15, 2014

  • Linda Sillitoe: Author
Fiction, Mystery, Historical Fiction
Salt Lake City (Utah)--Fiction; Depressions--1929--Utah--Fiction; Elephants--Fiction; Missing children--Fiction; Utah--History--Fiction
et in Salt Lake City at the height of the Great Depression, Linda Sillitoe’s last novel opens with three little girls, eleven-year-old triplets, skipping in front of their house at 1300 South, across from Liberty Park. They giggle lightly as they chant: Prin-cess Al-ice in Liberty Park Munch-es ba-nan-as ’til way after dark. Princess Alice is an elephant the children of Utah purchased by donating nickels and dimes to a circus. The girls don’t know this, but her handler takes the mammoth princess out on late-night strolls around the park when the moon is out. What they do know is that the elephant sometimes escapes and goes on a rampage, crashing through front-yard fences and collecting collars of clothesline laundry around her neck, a persistent train of barking dogs following behind. The girls’ father is a police officer who is investigating a boy’s disappearance. As the case unfolds, the perception of the park, with its eighty acres of trees and grass, will change from the epitome of freedom to a place to be avoided, even as Princess Alice moves to a secure confinement at a new zoo at the mouth of Emigration Canyon. The story is loosely based on the exploits of a real live elephant that lived in Liberty Park a decade before Sillitoe’s childhood in the neighborhood.
BX 8688.3 .Si35th 2014
9781560852278
218
First edition
Copyright © 2023 Brigham Young University. All rights reserved.