Title: The Rhino Keeper Series: Standalone Author: Jillian Forsberg Narrator: Caroline Hewitt Publish Date: February 14, 2025 Publisher: History Through Fiction LLC Genre: Historical Fiction Age: 16+ Started Reading: January 28, 2025 Finished Reading: February 14, 2025 NetGalley?: Yes
Book Summary from Goodreads:
Based on the true story of a Dutch sea captain who traveled with an Indian rhinoceros called Clara across 18th century Europe, THE RHINO KEEPER evokes both the thrill of discovery in the archives and the wonder felt by a world in which no European had seen a living rhinoceros.
2022 - College student Andrea Clarkson uncovers a historical mystery while studying abroad in Holland. From hidden desk drawers come unusual historical documents featuring a rhinoceros. On a lichen-covered eighteenth-century grave, the same animal is carved. When an expanding river forces exhumation, what she finds buried there is life-changing. Andrea faces her nightmares to retrieve what a grave robber steals: valuable proof of a long-forgotten history.
1740 - Ship captain Douwemout van der Meer has something not seen in two hundred the only rhino in Europe, called Clara. Douwemout and Clara tour Europe, enthralling peasants and queens, hoping to change popular views that rhinos are man-eating beasts. Absolute wonder follows, but when a priest sees idol worship and becomes hell-bent on destroying her, Clara, Douwe, and the lives of her bonded caretakers are at risk.
As Douwe becomes protectively dedicated to adventuring with Clara, unexpected love finds him, and his heart starts to tear. Will he choose a life with a traveling wonder-beast forever, or can love exist in many forms for the rhino keeper?
My Two Cents:
Goodreads Rating: 3 Stars
I debated on what to rate this book as. I appreciate that a portion of this book goes to Rhino conservation, and that the author had a note at the end pointing out specific moments in the book and how they related to the actual history. Unfortunately, I found myself annoyed with half of this book as I felt it was completely unnecessary. The story of Douwe and Clara in the 1700s truly feels strong enough to stand on its own. The modern plotline was superfluous, and did not add to the story in anyway. I was strongly considering skipping chapters that were set in the present, and I don't think the story would have been weakened by it. This felt like it could have been made into two separate books that were mildly thematic in that they both dealt with the same topic of Clara the Rhinoceros, but having them smashed together, flipping every other chapter, was completely disjointed. I listened to the audiobook and the narrator did a fantastic job, especially with differentiating between all of the voices and accents that were represented. I listened to this audiobook through NetGalley.
To Sum Up: Enjoyable historical fiction interrupted by the modern plot.
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