cover image The Great Escape from City Zoo

The Great Escape from City Zoo

Tohby Riddle. Farrar Straus Giroux, $16 (32pp) ISBN 978-0-374-32776-7

A quirky plot and monochromatic, olive-toned illustrations set a 1920s mood for this understated tale. When four unlikely companions--an elephant, a flamingo, an anteater and a turtle--escape from a zoo, they roam the city streets clothed in a variety of outfits (the anteater dons chef's garb, the turtle a sailor's uniform) ""so that no one would notice them... so that they could blend in."" This ironic tone informs Australian author and artist Riddle's compositions as well: the quartet watches King Kong on the big screen, checks out a museum with paintings by the likes of De Chirico and Magritte, and sits around an Edward Hopper-inspired bar. The sophistication of many of the jokes may make the book most popular with adults, but the characters themselves exude kid appeal. The elephant borrows the simplicity of line of Babar; his wan smile betrays the foursome's feeling of displacement outside of their zoo home. Youngsters will also respond to the broad humor as the zookeepers capture the anteater when he faints in front of a taxidermist's window (a sign reads, ""You snuff 'em, We stuff 'em""), the elephant when he can't resist cavorting in a Western town's fountain and the turtle when he falls on his back at a truck stop and can't get up. The closing ""unconfirmed sightings"" of the flamingo as a kind of Loch Ness Monster, a familiar-shaped lawn ornament and a figure adorning the top of a Vegas-style Flamingo casino will likely prompt laughter across the board. Riddle's background as a cartoonist serves him well; each finely honed illustration tells its own brief story. Ages 3-up. (Sept.)