The Thieves of Summer

Fiction & Literature, Crime
Cover of the book The Thieves of Summer by Linda Sillitoe, Signature Books
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Linda Sillitoe ISBN: 9781560853138
Publisher: Signature Books Publication: June 15, 2014
Imprint: Signature Books Language: English
Author: Linda Sillitoe
ISBN: 9781560853138
Publisher: Signature Books
Publication: June 15, 2014
Imprint: Signature Books
Language: English

Set in Salt Lake City at the height of the Great Depression, Linda Sillitoe’s last novel opens with three little girls, eleven-year-old triplets, skipping in front of their house at 1300 South, across from Liberty Park. They giggle lightly as they chant: 

Prin-cess Al-ice in Liberty Park
Munch-es ba-nan-as ’til way after dark.

Princess Alice is an elephant the children of Utah purchased by donating nickels and dimes to a circus. The girls don’t know this, but her handler takes the mammoth princess out on late-night strolls around the park when the moon is out. What they do know is that the elephant sometimes escapes and goes on a rampage, crashing through front-yard fences and collecting collars of clothesline laundry around her neck, a persistent train of barking dogs following behind. The girls’ father is a police officer who is investigating a boy’s disappearance. As the case unfolds, the perception of the park, with its eighty acres of trees and grass, will change from the epitome of freedom to a place to be avoided, even as Princess Alice moves to a secure confinement at a new zoo at the mouth of Emigration Canyon. The story is loosely based on the exploits of a real live elephant that lived in Liberty Park a decade before Sillitoe’s childhood in the neighborhood.  

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Set in Salt Lake City at the height of the Great Depression, Linda Sillitoe’s last novel opens with three little girls, eleven-year-old triplets, skipping in front of their house at 1300 South, across from Liberty Park. They giggle lightly as they chant: 

Prin-cess Al-ice in Liberty Park
Munch-es ba-nan-as ’til way after dark.

Princess Alice is an elephant the children of Utah purchased by donating nickels and dimes to a circus. The girls don’t know this, but her handler takes the mammoth princess out on late-night strolls around the park when the moon is out. What they do know is that the elephant sometimes escapes and goes on a rampage, crashing through front-yard fences and collecting collars of clothesline laundry around her neck, a persistent train of barking dogs following behind. The girls’ father is a police officer who is investigating a boy’s disappearance. As the case unfolds, the perception of the park, with its eighty acres of trees and grass, will change from the epitome of freedom to a place to be avoided, even as Princess Alice moves to a secure confinement at a new zoo at the mouth of Emigration Canyon. The story is loosely based on the exploits of a real live elephant that lived in Liberty Park a decade before Sillitoe’s childhood in the neighborhood.  

More books from Signature Books

Cover of the book Evolution and Mormonism by Linda Sillitoe
Cover of the book Confessions of a Mormon Historian by Linda Sillitoe
Cover of the book The Mormon Hierarchy by Linda Sillitoe
Cover of the book Confessions of a Mormon Historian by Linda Sillitoe
Cover of the book Fresh Courage Take by Linda Sillitoe
Cover of the book Murder by Sacrament by Linda Sillitoe
Cover of the book Early Mormonism and the Magic World View by Linda Sillitoe
Cover of the book Things in Heaven and Earth by Linda Sillitoe
Cover of the book Confessions of a Mormon Historian by Linda Sillitoe
Cover of the book Salt Lake School of the Prophets, 1867-1883 by Linda Sillitoe
Cover of the book Glorious in Persecution by Linda Sillitoe
Cover of the book Thirteenth Apostle by Linda Sillitoe
Cover of the book William Bickerton by Linda Sillitoe
Cover of the book The Council of Fifty by Linda Sillitoe
Cover of the book The Mormon Hierarchy by Linda Sillitoe
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy