I thought this story looked really compelling. I liked the premise, and the catchy title. Also, I’ve had the opportunity to watch the bizarre behavior of squirrels in New York (and in D.C. Ohmygod).
Upon reading, however . . . It just didn’t seem very squirrel-like. Maybe I’ve watched too many squirrels. It didn’t seem like realistic squirrel social interactions or motivations (other than food, which they’re pretty big on). I found the anthropocentric projections of hierarchy and houses and political machinations off-putting. I did enjoy some of the squirrel’s-eye-view portrayals of objects and places many humans take for granted, but often found them unrealistic. The writing style dragged, and often felt clunky.
I think it’s an interesting premise, and might be a doorway for people shifting from their own anthropocentric perspectives.
2 of 2 members found this review helpful.
Help us improve!
Register or
log in to rate this review.
The author describes “Beasts of New York” as “a children’s book for grown-ups” and that’s a pretty fair description. It’s the story of Patch, a squirrel living in Central Park, and his desperate search for food. It’s the desperation that makes it a story for grown-ups. The writing style at the beginning is fairly simple, with some lovely imagery, but the underlying theme is survival, and as survival becomes more difficult, the story becomes more complex.
Spring hasn’t come yet to New York and Patch has been unable to find food for days. All his caches of nuts are empty. He soon finds out that none of the other squirrels can find food, either. Something strange has happened. Squirrels have gone missing and there is a strange smell in some of the empty dreys. Torn between hunger and the safety of the Kingdom, the animals’ word for Central Park, Patch decides to cross the “wasteland” with its “death machines” and look for food in the “mountains”. Unlike most squirrels, he has friends among the birds and they’ve told him there is food all around the strange, vertical mountains, if he can just avoid the humans, dogs and rats.
It’s interesting to read how the various animals are portrayed. Dogs are mostly limited to shouting “Kill you! Eat you!”. The pigeons Patch meets can remember places and directions but not names or much else. Birds of prey and cats are arrogant and feared by all squirrels. Like squirrels, rabbits are timid but they’re not worth talking to. Rats are vicious, dirty, and dangerous in numbers. Patch meets many animals on his journey, and several become distinct, memorable characters.
The story is a bit reminiscent of “Watership Down” or the Silverwing books. The main characters are animals and the story is told from their perspective. Patch lives in the trees so he sees the world from the branches. His life revolves around finding food and avoiding predators. It’s a charming story, with some lyrical writing in the third person narration, although things get a bit violent and gory in parts. The dialog is fairly simple but then, they are talking squirrels. Smells play an important part and are often included in the descriptions. The pace is good, with the action coming from Patch’s movements, the tension coming from his fear of almost everything, and some humour coming from the insults he trades with his bluejay friend, Toro. From the beginning there is a sadness to the story because of Patch’s hunger and that of his family. As the story progresses, the writing becomes more complex and serious as Patch finds out what happened to the food.
“Beasts of New York” is a solid fantasy adventure about a squirrel forced to leave his home tree in order to find food. He discovers a wide world and many strange “people” along the way. If you enjoy animal adventure stories, you should definitely check this out.
3 of 3 members found this review helpful.
Help us improve!
Register or
log in to rate this review.
(Review written after reading approximately 20 pages).
Beasts of New York is not what I expected it to be when I clicked the link – I was expecting, frankly, a literal anthro squirrel protagonist, a human with a huge fluffy tail, that kind of thing.
I was pleasantly surprised.
It’s definitely far from the norm – but there is something that keeps you going, something intriguing about a protagonist whose perspective is mere inches from the ground (or tree branch). You get to see a side of New York that’s rarely explored, this isn’t the world of high fashion, or big business. It’s world of animal courts, of animals with the title "Lord" or, in the case of the hawk, "Prince".
It’s captivating – you can feel the fear of the "death machines" and the mixture of fear and horror when the first animal is murdered, the dread of our protagonist being captured by a hawk with a Captain Barbosa sensibility when it comes to following the terms of bargain.
The MC, Patch – is a wonderful POV character, and the cast that surround him are wonderful – a mother concerned only with feeding her children and her husband who makes a deal in order to do so. Twitch, a nervous, jittery squirrel with the amusing habit of stating the obvious. Duffa, a – ahem – bird-brained homing pigeon who is hopeless when it comes to anything but directions.
The plot moves at a reasonable pace, setting up all the characters, as well as the situation in an economical number of chapters. The chapter length is Goldilocks good – not too short, and not too long.
Beasts of New York – it’s something new in the serial world, drawing on something old.
2 of 2 members found this review helpful.
Help us improve!
Register or
log in to rate this review.