A series of strange occurrences befalls a Tennessee zoo in the summer of 1926.
Two Feathers is one of the star attractions at the Glendale Park Zoo in Nashville. All her life, she's been an entertainer, having grown up on the Miller Brothers 101 Ranch in Oklahoma, “the last Wild West show in existence.” Now, at Glendale, she’s reached the pinnacle of her career: She’s been given a stage name that plays on her Cherokee identity (her real name is Nancy) and a skill that brings in the crowds: horse diving. Two’s act may be beloved by the crowds, but she struggles socially; as a Native American, she is decidedly apart from White society and is most at home with her friend Hank Crawford, who tends the park’s animals despite coming from an affluent Black family. When Two has a serious accident during her act, the world of the zoo grows exponentially odder, and the novel’s points of view multiply. Animals fall ill. Clive Lovett, the zookeeper and park manager, moves from being traumatized by his experiences fighting for England in the First World War to seeing actual ghosts. Those same ghosts recount their stories, watching and trying to affect the living realm. Verble, a citizen of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, has written an ambitious novel that’s impressive in its scope and concept: Glendale Park Zoo and the 101 are rife with narrative possibility and give the author a chance to examine a fascinating cross section of race and class and the uneasy relations between all manner of characters. The research lies heavily on the novel’s frame, though, and readers may find themselves wishing to sweep away some of the exposition to stick with Two and the life she attempts to carve out for herself against the weight of history.
An overflowing narrative about the ubiquitous presence of the past.