From Booklist:
Ages 4-6. Young Cora lives with two elephants, Edward and Ophelia, under the boabab tree in the jungle. She arrived as a baby in a life preserver tagged "Pier 38, San Francisco." Eager for a visit home, Cora sells enough coconuts to get them to Frisco, but alas, Pier 38 is a life preserver warehouse, not the home of which Cora has dreamed. Undaunted, the trio decide to explore San Francisco anyway, and Edward and Ophelia wind up with jobs. Cora, for her part, learns lots of human stuff (such as the many ways to do your hair), but she soon realizes that Edward doesn't like being stuffed into a suit and that Ophelia would rather be hobnobbing with her jungle pals than showing off stuffed animals in a museum. So it's back to Africa, where Cora goes into town once a week to do people things; but mostly she swims and plays at the watering hole and frolics in the brown sand with the pachyderms. Rovetch neatly pulls off the girl-living-with-elephants scenario, mostly because Edward and Ophelia are such dears, who wouldn't want to live with them? The text is aided by Weston's fresh and funny watercolor art featuring Babar-esque characters who make you smile just looking at them. A delightful tale that proves the adage home is where the herd is. Ilene Cooper
From Publishers Weekly:
After telling their adopted daughter Cora how they found her in her infancy, washed ashore, Edward and Ophelia-who, unlike Cora, are elephants-promise to pursue their sole clue to her origins: a life-preserver tag labeled "Pier 38, San Francisco." Cora becomes obsessed with discovering where she came from. But after a hard-earned trip from their African watering hole to San Francisco, girl and elephants learn that "Pier 38" is a life-preserver factory. Rovetch (Trigwater Did It) says merely that Cora is "sad and disappointed" before launching into her heroine's pleasure in a protracted stay with the factory owner and his wife. The point of this scattershot story is unclear: why raise the question of Cora's parentage only to drop it? In what seems an effort to allay the anxieties raised by the plot, the illustrations are uniformly sunny and bright, and Edward and Ophelia, rotund, cuddly and thoroughly anthropomorphized, bear more than a passing resemblance to Babar and his friends. Ages 3-8.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.