No author of easy readers did subtle beauty like Arnold Lobel. His drawings and simple words capture the poignancy of life and death in ways that move readers of all ages, and Uncle Elephant does this just as well as his more famed Frog and Toad series. An elephant boy's life changes on the day his mother and father embark on a boat voyage. A squall slams the boat, and Mother and Father are lost at sea. Has the worst befallen them? The boy sits numb and alone in his bedroom until Uncle Elephant arrives. The youngster has never met the man, but he spirits his nephew away from the gloomy room to stay at his house.
On the train ride there, Uncle Elephant counts items outside the window, bemoaning every time one sneaks by uncounted. The boy is curious what Uncle Elephant is counting, but the specific item frequently changes. It all passes so quickly on a train, just as life whips by if we don't engage with its moments. At Uncle Elephant's house the two dine together, and are shocked when the table lamp seems to contain a genie. With Uncle Elephant and the boy already dreaming up wishes, they'e disappointed to find this opportunity isn't what they assumed. A moonlit dinner isn't bad consolation, though. Come morning, the boy finds his uncle trumpeting loudly in his own flower garden to greet the dawn. He cultivated the garden as refuge from a harsh world, and is proud to share this piece of his soul with the boy. Later they take a walk together, but Uncle Elephant's body moans and groans and he has to go home and rest his joints. Easing into his favorite chair should make "the creaks" go away.
What will salve Uncle Elephant's discomfort faster? Telling a story. An old King and young Prince were on a walk, he begins the story, and became lost in the woods. A lion leaps out and they team up to repel the carnivore, but still they are lost. Maybe if the King hoists the Prince atop his head, his young eyes will spot their castle. The King in his wisdom and Prince in his youth are perfect companions, providing what the other needs to survive and thrive. After the story, when the boy spots a photo of Uncle Elephant as a kid with his own parents, it reminds him Mother and Father may be gone, and sadness washes over him. Uncle Elephant digs in the closet for comical clothes to dress in, but has none. So he puts on every article of clothing he owns. The boy can't help laughing at that. Crisis averted. When Uncle Elephant requests his nephew sing for him, the boy admits he knows not a single tune. Everyone needs a song to hold in their heart, so Uncle Elephant composes one the boy will always have to remember their days together. All wondrous times eventually end, and so does this living arrangement of boy and uncle. The man will find a way to show the youngster what the past four days have meant to him, and that an old elephant never forgets a precious memory.
"I have a song.
It's an elephant song.
I will sing it
and never forget
that, of all music played,
there is no better made
than an uncle
and nephew duet."
—Uncle Elephant, P. 56
Read the nine stories in this book with the eyes of your heart, and you'll discover they're more than scampish tales of fun. Each one has wisdom worth meditating on. Uncle Elephant isn't one for sappy speeches, so his quiet sentiments at the end are all the more affecting: "They were wonderful days. They all passed too fast." Whether you had four days or fourteen years with them, children grow up in a blur too fast to believe, like the landscape passing beneath a train window as you try to count items outside. Irreplaceable relationships fade from sight and you're left with memories, a wistful if priceless gift. Uncle Elephant is a story with humor, heart, lovely illustrations, and a dose of the magic that animates a life well lived. I highly recommend.