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CITY ZOO by Jeff Pedigo

CITY ZOO

An Unfairy Story

by Jeff Pedigo

Pub Date: July 17th, 2024
ISBN: 9798350959369
Publisher: BookBaby

Pedigo gives former presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump the Animal Farm treatment in this political allegory.

It’s been a few months since the animals of the City Zoo overthrew their human keepers and declared their independence. After a few unsuccessful attempts to reassert control, the city’s mayor has decided to let them have it, leaving the animals to govern the zoo at their own discretion. The animals quickly adopt the signifiers of nationhood—a flag, an Independence Day, a national anthem (“Animals of ev’ry kingdom, / Hearken to our tale of hope. / How we won the keys to freedom. / No more bars, or chains, or rope”). The business of governing, however, proves quite a bit harder. The thought leaders behind the initial revolution set up a power-sharing government with an Animal Zookeeper working alongside representatives of the zoo’s various habitats. Keeping order among the menagerie proves difficult, however. The monkey-run newspaper has its own agenda, and the predators—who agreed to go vegetarian during the revolution—start to break their truce. When the wise impartial leader Leo the lion dies, coalitions arise to fill the vacuum. There’s bound to be a showdown, but do either of the rival Animal Zookeepers—Gus the elephant or Balthazar the donkey—really represent the best interests of all species? The prose has the ironic distance of a folk tale: “The media latched on to Balthazar’s accusation that Gus was in league with the People somehow. After he was barred from Primate Plaza, the popular elephant began giving speeches to overflow crowds over in Picnic Park.” Pedigo displays impressive imagination when it comes to bringing this animal society to life, so much that his ham-fisted retelling of the Trump era—with Gus as Trump, Balthazar as Obama, and the “two-toed sloth Brandon” as Biden—feels like a waste of the world. It’s a sluggish, predetermined story, and its insights into the political process are neither novel nor profound. Readers would be better off just picking up Orwell again.

A well-drawn but ultimately tedious zoological allegory of American politics.