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An Elephant in the Garden

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Lizzie and Karl’s mother is a zoo keeper; the family has become attached to an orphaned elephant named Marlene, who will be destroyed as a precautionary measure so she and the other animals don’t run wild should the zoo be hit by bombs. The family persuades the zoo director to let Marlene stay in their garden instead. When the city is bombed, the family flees with thousands of others, but how can they walk the same route when they have an elephant in tow, and keep themselves safe? Along the way, they meet Peter, a Canadian navigator who risks his own capture to save the family.

As Michael Morpurgo writes in an author’s note, An Elephant in the Garden is inspired by historical truths, and by his admiration for elephants, “the noblest and wisest and most sensitive of all creatures.” Here is a story that brings together an unlikely group of survivors whose faith in kindness and love proves the best weapon of all.

233 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2009

1126 people are currently reading
8755 people want to read

About the author

Michael Morpurgo

625 books3,002 followers
Sir Michael Andrew Morpurgo, OBE, FRSL is the author of many books for children, five of which have been made into films. He also writes his own screenplays and libretti for opera. Born in St Albans, Hertfordshire, in 1943, he was evacuated to Cumberland during the last years of the Second World War, then returned to London, moving later to Essex. After a brief and unsuccessful spell in the army, he took up teaching and started to write. He left teaching after ten years in order to set up 'Farms for City Children' with his wife. They have three farms in Devon, Wales and Gloucestershire, open to inner city school children who come to stay and work with the animals. In 1999 this work was publicly recognised when he and his wife were invested a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) for services to youth. In 2003, he was advanced to an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE). He became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature (FRSL) in 2004. He was knighted in the 2018 for his services to literature and charity. He is also a father and grandfather, so children have always played a large part in his life. Every year he and his family spend time in the Scilly Isles, the setting for three of his books.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,367 reviews
Profile Image for Reading_ Tamishly.
5,297 reviews3,441 followers
January 27, 2025
"We learned that life goes on."

Actually my heart is broken and I cannot stop crying.

The best by the author I have read so far. It's so mysteriously beautiful, heartbreaking as well as heartwarming, hopeful and, yes, romantic.

Me heart feels so wholesome now after reading this book. Everything about this book has got me fall in love with it.

First, the title. Then the cover. Who wouldn't like it?! And it's all relevant. And I really adore the black and white ink illustrations. They are so well done.

The book is so short yet it's packed with emotions throughout. It's one of the most well-written middle grade books I have ever read.

The story talks about

*Disability, bullying

*WWII

*Loss of a family member

*Lizzie's family, war times, the struggles, hunger and pain

And yet the story is beautiful and filled with hope. The romance in there is just too pure.

One of the best reads of the year!
Profile Image for Ana Ovejero.
96 reviews40 followers
September 23, 2018
The story happens in Germany in 1945. The war is ending and the terrifying Red Army is coming closer and closer to Dresden, the city where Elizabeth, the protagonist, lives. She shares her home with her mum Mutti, her dad Papi and her little brother Karli.

Papi is sent to the front and the family has to survive in a time when food becomes scarce. Mutti works in the zoo and her favourite animal is Marlene, a young elephant, named after the singer Marlene Dietrich, When the bombs of the Allies start falling in the city, Mutti decides to escape to the countryside with Marlene and her children. As Karli suffers of asthma, he rides Marlene most of the journey.

When they get to their uncle and aunt's farm, a surprise that will endanger their lives is waiting for them.

A powerful telling of the lives of the Germans living through the catastrophic ending of the war, escaping the horror the Red Army is inflicting on civilians and trying to survive thinking about their relatives who are fighting in the front.

Abook for middle-school kids, Elizabeth's voice hepls readers to connect with the destiny of this family and the elepanth Marlene, a symbol of the desire to live, even in the darkest day of History.

mail:ana.ovejero@gmail.com
instagram:@ananbooks
Profile Image for La Tonya  Jordan.
376 reviews95 followers
November 22, 2020
A delightful read of a German family during the end of WWII. Their city of Dresden was decimated in bombing. They trekked through the countryside with Marlene, a four year elephant, who Mutti saved from the city zoo. This journey bonded them as a family in the struggle against the snow, cold weather, hungry, the sounds of bombing and rifle shots in the distance behind them, and other refugees. First making it to Uncle Manfred and Auntie Lottie's farm and finding Peter, the Canadian navigator. Peter's bomber was shot down. He was the sole survivor when he parachuted from his plane before it exploded. He was hiding for his life.

Second, the final journey to the west to surrender to the allies. Both treks were memorable and let's Elizabeth tell the story to Karl and his mother in her own way. Sit back and listen to an unforgettable journey with Marlene. The journey will make you cry.

Quotes:

"Because I tell fibs sometimes, so I can always tell when someone else is, and she's not. And she's not muddle either, like Gran is. If she says she had an elephant in her garden, then she did."

We were some distance away from the city, but I could feel the warmth of that great fire on my face as I watched.

There was no barn, no shed, only trunkless trees rising strangely out of the mist.
Profile Image for Karina.
1,027 reviews
May 14, 2019
Light and easy YA read. I liked how the story was about an elephant and a family determined to save her. It wasn't a typical WWII story which made it more interesting. It became a sweet love story. Older ppl have fantastic stories of their younger days and we should definitely be better listeners.

My 3.5 stars is only bc I felt there was more details missing. The characters also seemed ignorant in believing they (as in country of residence) can start a war and kill innocent people but when they get bombed to stop Hitler and the atrocities going on then everyone else becomes the enemy. I think authors put forward their own personal feelings or politics into a story instead of being honest to all sides to let the reader determine their truth. Kids are smart so why dumb them down?

Also, when my son reads this I feel like I would have to explain to him that in war everyone is guilty of sin from the rich that start it to the man in the trenches pointing a gun.
Profile Image for Cheryl .
1,095 reviews147 followers
February 22, 2023
This story is set in Dresden, Germany during World War II. Lizzie’s mother works at the Dresden zoo. As fear mounts about the Allied bombers, Lizzie’s mother convinces the zookeeper to let Lizzie’s family shelter a baby elephant in their back yard.

One winter day the bombers arrive, and as the bombs rain down on Dresden, Lizzie, her mother, and her younger brother flee the city - with the baby elephant in tow! They decide to try to reach the American and British forces who are approaching from the west. Will they make it before the Russian army arrives? Then an unexpected encounter with a Canadian airman complicates their plans.

This book is written for young readers but adults would enjoy it as well. Readers will glimpse life from a young German girl’s perspective as World War II nears its end.
Profile Image for Deborah.
633 reviews95 followers
March 10, 2024
Five Great Big Stars!

This incredible book has suspense, sadness , happiness and one incredible part of this is that it is inspired by a true story. A perfect read for me. I could practically feel their happiness and see their tears. I saw the entire book in my minds eye. I loved it so much.
Profile Image for Ѽ tazannah Ѽ.
219 reviews282 followers
October 31, 2023
Now I don’t normally reread books, but this book might just be why I fell in love with reading. I’ve read this book soo many times, and each time I read it, it was just as achingly tragic as the last. This book was woven with such emotional depth and ingenuity… ahh, nothing surpasses it as a MG read.

This book sent me crying so many times, but in a beautiful, melancholy way. I’ll never forget how this book made me feel.
Profile Image for Book Concierge.
3,072 reviews389 followers
June 25, 2024
A frail and elderly Lizzie tells the story of her youth in Dresden Germany during World War II. Her father was fighting on the Russian front. Her mother was a zookeeper and fearing for the safety of the young elephant, she brought the animal home each night to their private garden. But the war is taking a toll on everyone and when the bombing begins on a snowy February night the family must flee the burning city. How can they possibly evade enemy troops with an elephant in tow?

What a wonderful and heart-warming story! Inspired by true events, Morpurgo has crafted a tale of courage, perseverance, and kindness in the face of horrific deprivation. The author doesn’t dwell on the horrors of war, but he doesn’t skip them either. He shows that while nations may be enemies at war, individual people can (and do) disagree with their leaders. Morpurgo also takes the opportunity to show people doing what they believe is best and morally right despite the difficulty and even personal danger in doing so.

I had previously read War Horse by the same author, and did not warm to it. So I was a little hesitant to read this one, but I’m glad I did, because I loved this book. I think the difference, for me, was the narrator. The earlier book was told from the animal’s point of view and I found that awkward. In contrast, I was easily able to connect with Lizzie. I’m sorry there are no young children in my life because I kept wanting to read it aloud; I could easily imagine a teacher capturing the attention of a class with this story.

Update June 2024 I re-read this for a challenge and am so glad I revisited it! There are two young people in my life now, girls I met through my library’s summer pen-pal program and I can hardly wait to talk to them about this book!
Profile Image for Skip.
3,824 reviews574 followers
August 8, 2014
Inspired by two true events described the afterword, this novel is narrated by an elderly woman (Lizzie) in a nursing home telling the story of her youth in Dresden Germany during World War II. Her mother was a zookeeper, who brought a young elephant home nightly to their private garden out of fear for the mammal's safety. When the bombing begins on a snowy winter night, Lizzie flees with her mother, younger brother, and Marlene, the elephant. They flee to the country, only to find a Canadian navigator on their family's farm. A seminal event unites these enemies, and together they flee the invading Russians. Heartwarming story of courage, friendships, love, and war. 4.5 stars.

Profile Image for Jammin Jenny.
1,529 reviews220 followers
September 7, 2020
I really enjoyed this book where a woman relates her story from during WWII (she was a young woman). They were escaping through the countryside with Marlena the elephant. It was a touching and inspirational stories.
Profile Image for Heather Johnson.
191 reviews10 followers
March 5, 2013
This book should be a movie! I want to see this one in theaters.

What a fantastic read! Before reading this book, the cover art of the elephant is beautiful and serene, quite a contrast to the raging fires of the bombed city in the background. When I read the jacket, I wasn't quite sure to expect, and I judged it from the description on the book jacket ("Oh, another World War 2 novel"), but to readers who think similarly: don't. This book sets itself apart.

This book centers around this young persistent and playful elephant, a symbol of hope during the plights of this family, traveling to meet the American soldiers after their city is destroyed. While the main character annoyed me at times (what teenagers don't), she was real and authentic. This woman's story - ringing with truth from historical events - was enchanting and full of adventures.

Honestly, without the romantic conclusion (the letters, Papi's whereabouts, marriage, circus), I would not have fallen for this book. The happily ever after to the story was a touch that I enjoyed, knowing how everything turned out after the journey. What a touching ending. This book is not littered with facts, which I enjoyed, and develops its characters. Highly recommended for a read.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Sonja Arlow.
1,228 reviews7 followers
December 10, 2014
This was a children’s book (probably for ages between 9 and 12) verrrry loosely based on real events during WW2 where an elephant was rescued from a Belfast zoo.

It was a sweet story that only lightly touched on the horrors of the war and gave the perspective of Non-Nazi German citizens and their struggles with becoming fugitives in their own country. The characters felt a little flat and the story predictable but then again I am not the target reader.
Profile Image for BooksNCrannies.
223 reviews96 followers
January 6, 2025
Not the best of Morpurgo's books.

✏️ Review ✏️

For some reason, I just couldn't seem to get into this story. There are no content issues (besides a few instances of cussing), but the plot isn't that gripping and the characters feel distant. The one aspect I found intriguing is that this WWII story is told from the Germans' perspective — gives quite a different perspective on the war.

You might enjoy this story; I'm not going to recommend it, but neither am I going to tell you not to read it. But as someone who has read many of Morpurgo's books, I would suggest sampling some of Morpurgo's other works first before trying An Elephant in the Garden.

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📊 A Quick Overview 📊

👍🏼 What I Liked:
• The different perspective about WWII (told from the Germans' pov).

👎🏼 What I Did Not Like:
• The characters — they feel too distant.
• The plot — kinda lackluster, although the elephant is a interesting diversion.

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📖 BOOK BREAKDOWN 📖 (Overall: 2/5)
~Fundamentals: (1=worst; 5=best)
— 📈 Plot: 2/5
— 📝 Writing: 3/5
— 👥 Characters: 1.5/5

~Content: (0=none; 1=least; 5=most)

— 🤬 Language: 1/5

One use of "d*mn"; and three uses of "bastard" as an insult.

— ⚔️ Violence: 0/5

— ⚠️ Sexual: 0/5

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📣 Random Comments 📣

• (None)

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💬 Favorite Quotes 💬

• (None)
Profile Image for Anne Hamilton.
Author 57 books184 followers
March 29, 2024
Despite the intriguing title and the promise of a mystery revealed, this is a very slow book to start. I've read a lot of Morpurgo and none has the almost interminable creep of the first half of this book.

Morpurgo tries a variation on his usual framing device in this story and, rather than a tale of youth bookended by an adult narrator's musings, the reflections are interspersed throughout.

Lizzie is a solitary old woman in a nursing home who often speaks of the time she had an elephant in her garden. The staff are convinced she is delusional. But one day, a small boy felicitously named Karl winds up in her room. Her younger brother was Karl too and, over sixty years previously, looked much like the little rascal she finds in her bedroom.

And so she tells him the story of Marlene the elephant. During the Second World War, her mother helped at the Dresden Zoo and became attached to a young elephant. Lizzie's mum is determined that, should the allied bombers come to Dresden as they have to other cities, Marlene will be safe. The director of the zoo has decided all animals will be shot in case they escape and terrify the citizens after the raid. Each day she takes the elephant to the zoo and each night she brings it home to the garden. One bitter winter night, the elephant charges after an alsatian that harasses her and the whole family chase after it.

It is only because they are out near the country that they escape the firestorm that engulfs Dresden when the allied bombing raid begins. They flee on foot, heading for a relative's farm a dozen kilometres out of the city, cutting across country to avoid the refugees on the main road. When they finally reach the farm, it seems to be deserted. Then they find an allied airman, a Canadian navigator, who is hiding out... German soldiers are seeking him and it's unlikely he'll make it to a prisoner-of-war camp. Everyone's seeking vengeance after the firestorm...

As I said, the first half of the book drags. Too much telling. Way too much. Too much reporting. The story picks up immensely with the introduction of the Canadian. For the first time in the story, there's real tension, bubbling conflict and a much smarter pace.

An okay book, but certainly not up to Morpurgo's usual standard.
Profile Image for Lisa Burgos.
623 reviews56 followers
May 23, 2023
A true story based on a family excuating Dresden, Germany during World War II and their journey along the way. The elephant was saved from the zoo in Dresden and traveled along with the family. She (Marlene) gave people hope and promise during a grim time.
*Bookgroup read.
Profile Image for Lucy.
13 reviews2 followers
August 28, 2022
I really hope this was meant to be a kids book.

As a teen who reviews like an adult, I have quite a few things to say:
1. The plot was rushed. This book could have been 400 pages yet it was under 200. This made me feel like I was skimming and missing details.
2. The character development and romance were rushed. I could say so much about this, but I won’t.
3. There were so many unrealistic happy endings in this. There were so many allusions to bad things happening to a few characters and in the end eVeRyOnE wAs HaPpY.

I really liked the premise of the book but felt so let down. I’ve seen a lot of good reviews though so maybe I’m just a reader who is used to dark dystopian books :)
Profile Image for The Dusty Jacket.
316 reviews29 followers
February 23, 2019
Lizzie is eighty-two years old and is idly spending her days in a nursing home. But today is February 13th and on this particular day, she has a story to tell. It’s a rather sad story because on this day, in 1945, the bombers flew over Dresden, Germany and set the city on fire. Lizzie, her brother, and her mother are forced to flee their home. The Red Army is coming from the east and the allied forces—the Americans and British—are coming from the west. They would go west, but they would not be going alone. They would be bringing Marlene, a four-year-old elephant that Lizzie’s mother rescued from the zoo. It would be this wonderful, gentle companion that would keep their spirits up, open unexpected doors, and ultimately save their lives.

Michael Morpurgo proves once again what a gifted and compassionate storyteller he is. An Elephant in the Garden is a beautifully told and compelling story that transports the reader into war-torn Germany as thousands of refugees struggle for survival during World War II. His characters leap off the page and we are there to share in their daily quest for food, shelter, and obscurity from the encroaching Russian soldiers. In his Author’s Note, Morpurgo writes that his story was inspired by an actual female zookeeper who saved one young elephant from certain death. The zoo’s director had given orders that all animals were to be killed rather than risk their release into the town should the city fall under attack. If you Google “Belgium, Zoo, Elephant, WWII”, you can see actual photographs and the story which inspired this heartwarming book.

At my library, this book is shelved in the young adult section; however, I think children as young as nine would appreciate and benefit from this story. Stories about war are often dark and bleak, but the overall message of courage, resilience, friendship, and hope spans across all age groups and garners mutual appeal.

When Lizzie was conveying a moment in her youth, she recalled an instance when she was talking to Marlene, desperate to find some comfort and understanding from her silent friend. She said, “For an answer she wafted her ears gently at me, and groaned deep inside herself. It was enough to tell me that she had listened, and understood, and that she did not judge me. I learned something that day from Marlene, about friendship, and I have never forgotten it. To be a true friend, you have to be a good listener, and I discovered that day that Marlene was the truest of friends.” Morpurgo reminds us that true friends not only listen with their ears, but also with their hearts and sometimes the best friends need not offer words in return, but simply just offer themselves.
27 reviews2 followers
March 14, 2012
According to Michael Morpurgo (War Horse), “An Elephant in the Garden,” was inspired by a true story of an elephant rescued from the Belfast Zoo during WWII. The story begins in a nursing home in Canada with Lizzie, an aging woman who feels compelled to tell her life story to a 9 year old boy, the son of one of the nurses. Lizzie describes her life in Dresden, Germany during WWII. Lizzie and her younger brother are generally content until their father is sent to fight on the Russian front. The war begins to change their lives forever. Lizzie’s mother works as a zookeeper at the local zoo and is worried about the zoo animals as the war gets closer. She knows all the zoo animals must be destroyed if the Allies begin bombing. One day Karl & Lizzie’s mother brings home an elephant (Marlene) and puts her in their garden. She cannot bear to shoot this animal that she has cared for! The elephant settles in their life and the children take the elephant for walks with a leash to the surprise of their neighbors! When the bombs begin to fall the family flees into the countryside with their elephant. Their journey across Germany changes the lives of this family and the elephant in unexpected ways. This is easy read which will appeal to many readers and Morpurgo is a skilled writer.
Considering his success with “War Horse”, this novel feels like a prologue to a screenplay.
Profile Image for Karin.
1,815 reviews32 followers
January 7, 2025
Until I decided to check LibraryThing, I hadn't realized that the first time I read this was also in May, but 2013 (GR just said added 2016 when I imported it from Shelfari, see below).

This novel is based on true accounts (see below), but in and of itself is fiction. This is a novel for middle school ages set in WW II Germany but also in present day Canada. In the present time (this was back in 2010 when more WW II survivors were around) the POV is of a nurse who has to take her son to work with her on Saturdays in a nursing home. The other POV is of Elizabeth, an elderly woman who initially seems as though she may be telling tall tales when she claims to have seen an elephant in their yard as a teen.

Original Review from Shelfari cut and pasted from LibraryThing since it didn't make it here!

A story within a story, an elderly nursing home patient, Elizabeth (Lizzie) tells a caretaker and her son about the escape of her family from Dresden in winter of 1945 with an elephant in tow. Along the arduous trek they surprise a wounded Canadian RAF navigator, who joins them on their journey.

The story is based on two different true accounts, one of an Irish woman who saved an elephant in WWII and the other of a character met somewhere on the journey. Three unlikely sets of friendship form during this book as well. It is nicely paced and keeps the reader interested throughout.
Profile Image for Linda Lipko.
1,904 reviews50 followers
February 23, 2012
I loved this book! It is yet another wonderful example of Young adult genre transcends a specific age category.

During WWII Dresden Germany was blasted/bombed unmercifully. This is a tale of an older woman, now in a nursing home, who recounts the story of her brave mother who worked in the zoo and fearing that an elephant she had tended since its childhood would die in the war, brought the animal home.

When Dresden was bombed the family left the ruined city and made a trek westward with the elephant in tow.

This is an insightful story of an elephant who was saved and in turn saved a family.

Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Ken.
2,550 reviews1,376 followers
December 31, 2015
With Michael Morpurgo you know exactly what your getting, a tale with an animal set around a war. This time an Elephant in Germany during the Second World War.
As soon as you slip into this tale you know your in great company, a perfect read.
Profile Image for Connie.
1,593 reviews24 followers
January 15, 2021
I own this book.

This book is told from the point of view of Lizzie, an elderly woman in a care home who knows nobody but little Karl believes that during the war, she had an elephant in her garden. When Karl's mum allows her to tell her whole story to Karl, she tells a story of her and her siblings and their survival in 1940s German with an elephant in the garden. Like my previous reading of Shadow, this book seems whimsical, but it was actually a thing where elephants lived with their zookeepers during the war to escape being shot. This book also seems like it's going to be a light-hearted story about an elephant but it actually works out to be more of a story of love and loss and survival. It wasn't as harrowing as Shadow but it was definitely still hard-hitting in places, especially when discussing the scene with the British bombers.
Profile Image for Deborah Sherman.
433 reviews7 followers
January 21, 2024
This book was inspired by a true story. The book tells the story through a bed ridden woman named Lizzie who is in a nursing home. It is a war story about her family; her mother Mutti, brother Karl, and father Pappi. It's about their journey away from home and the bombings in Dresden during World War II. With them is a young elephant named Marlene who the mother saved from the zoo where she was a zookeeper. You will need to read this book to find out what happens on their journey.

This book was written for young readers but as an adult I enjoyed it and highly recommend. Loved the title and the cover.
Profile Image for Lauren Stoolfire.
4,737 reviews295 followers
September 16, 2015
During WWII, Lizzie's mother works as a zookeeper to help provide for her family while her husband is away fighting. Lizzie, her mother, and her younger brother become especially attached to a young orphaned elephant named Marlene. With the bombings of Dresden imminent, the zoo animals are going to be put down as a precautionary measure, but Lizzie's mother gets permission to let the elephant stay in family garden. As the bombs begin to fall, city residents, including Lizzie's family along with Marlene, are forced to flee from the city. As they trek to the safety of an family member's abandoned home, they cross paths with the enemy, a Canadian Royal Air Force Navigator named Peter.

Michael Morpurgo's An Elephant in the Garden was loaned to me by a friend who had just stumbled across it and had nothing but great things to say about it. She had never read anything by this author, like me, but was pleasantly surprised by how much she enjoyed it. I've always been intrigued by this time period and just looked at that cover, not to mention the fascinating summary. I'm glad I took the time to read this novel. It's a beautifully written tale of survival, loss, friendship, and hope featuring nuanced characters. I particularly enjoyed how the author weaves the past and present into the novel as a much older Lizzie tells her story to her caregivers at her nursing home. I fully plan on reading more by Michael Morpugo in the future.
Profile Image for Meyers Cooper Debbie.
274 reviews1 follower
May 7, 2017
It's always a great day when books unexpectedly show up in your classroom. It becomes an even better day when this book is nestled contently within the confines of that box waiting for you to discover it. The title instantly attracted me to this book. How does an elephant just casually live in the garden? Once I read the brief synopsis on the back, it didn't take much convincing that I needed to read this book. Within the first few chapters of Lizzie's story, I realized that this story needed to be shared with my students. This is a very unique perspective of World War II. This is a family that struggles with the expectations of war - while taking care of an elephant. There are moments of uncertainty that made me feel a little sick to my stomach, but there were moments that restored my love of humanity. I'm never of a fan of "animal" stories because they always end tragically - anyone remember Old Yeller, Marley or Bambi's mother? However, this book gives me hope that not all stories with animals have to rip my heart out. Truly beautiful. Truly magical.
P.S. I now want an elephant of my own.
Profile Image for Don.
1,427 reviews16 followers
August 12, 2013
I had a Barnes and Noble email the other day that mentioned "An Elephant in the Garden" as a listing in the children's books, then went on to say it was by Michael Morpurgo the author of "War Horse." I thought I would check it out. Found it in the children's section at Central Library.

In this story a German family escapes the Dresden bombing with the young elephant the mother has been taking care of at the zoo. The odd group of refugees form a family escaping towards the Americans and away from the Russians. A skillfully told tale that must be entertaining to older children. It was for me.

This wonderful tale is based loosely on two true stories. The first about a Belfast zookeeper who during WWII kept a baby elephant safe during the bombings. The second story was about a German family that became refugees as a result of the Dresden bombings. Morpurgo states elephants are "the noblest and wisest and most sensitive of all creatures". The final words of the Author's Notes are that humans "are often not nearly as noble and wise as they should be, sadly."

Profile Image for Alexis Travers.
2 reviews2 followers
May 3, 2013
An Elephant in the Garden is about a family of three that lives in Dresden. Lizzie, Karli and their mom Mutti. Their father is fighting in World War II. Mutti works at a zoo, and has a very close relationship with this elephant. When they hear that Dresden is going to be bombed and they have to kill all the animals, Mutti forces the head of the zoo to let her keep the elephant Marlene in the garden. Unfortonaly Desden ended up getting bombed.Their family escaped just like may other families in their town. Their family and thousands of people head out to try to find their way. When they find themselves at their relatives house which is abandoned they meet a solider which helps them throughout their journey.
Profile Image for Joshua.
8 reviews
October 27, 2024
It's so wonderfully and classically Michael Morpurgo. Told in a way that only he could, giving you the boots on the ground perspective of the every family during World War 2. A bitter sweet story, about an extraordinary, yet believable, family's journey escaping the the bombings and surviving the German winter whilst the threat of the Russians invading looms closer
Profile Image for Aubrey Bass.
491 reviews7 followers
June 22, 2024
This book was absolutely fantastic! Such a great read aloud for my kids and engaging for not only them, but my husband and I on our road trip. This was a great novel as an intro into some complicated events of WW2, that were perfect segways to conversations and explanations. A rarity for me, I even got choked up towards the end, feeling like we were parting with old friends from our long journey together. Our family really enjoyed this book and would definitely read another book by this author!
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