In the yards around Coney Island's Luna Park, the condemned elephant places each foot onto a copper plate. Once ignited with over 6,000 volts of alternating current, they smoke beneath her planted feet. The smoke rises around her body, her trunk goes rigid, and all five tons of her list forward.
The best part of Elena Passarello's Animals Strike Curious Poses, a collection of essays about animals given names by human beings, is "Jumbo II," a history of the elephant who was executed by Thomas Edison's motion picture studio at the turn of the century. In this essay, Passarello ties together several different currents--excuse the pun--that came together to result in Jumbo's execution. One such current is the history of elephants in the new world, another the adoption of electric current as a source of power. At the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, an attempt to electrocute an earlier elephant is botched; it's at the same exposition where President McKinley will shortly be killed by an assassin. That assassin, Leon Czolgosz, will end up in the electric chair himself, starring in a short film of his execution filmed by--of course--Edison studios. In this way, Passarello brings together those kind of rhymes that history bears, and captures a moment of American history marked by cruelty and violence as much as progress and scientific advancement.
The second best part of the book is a two-page sketch in which Koko the gorilla uses her sign language to deliver a version of the famously vile joke "The Aristocrats":
"Ingrid hole smoke-ring blow. Mother-gorilla hole blow harmonica. Father-gorilla dance, balloon-on-noodle. Baby-gorilla clowntime, balloon-on-tadpole. Ingrid hole smoke-smoke. Around together skateboard do--smoke noodle balloon harmonica ride all! Harmonica hole play 'Purple Rain' All MAYONNAISE RAIN! All finished! Thank you."
Mustache-man tell: "Wow. What name show?"
Father-gorilla tell: "WE WONDERFUL SNOB PEOPLE!"
A note in the back of the book informs that the essay is constructed by only using words that were in Koko's vocabulary. You might say something like, the essay shows us how communicative Koko was within the limits of her language, and reveals how closer animals are to the human than we sometimes think. But mostly, it's just really, really funny.
I didn't think every essay in Animals Strike Curious Poses worked. I was less patient with essays on Yuka the frozen mammoth, the Wolf of Gubbio that befriended St. Francis of Assisi, and Mike, the Headless Chicken. At times I thought the essays verged a little too much on the literary, when what I really craved was a much more straightforward explanation of who this animal was, which sent me more than once to Wikipedia. That said, some of the swinging-for-the-fences pieces are the most successful and interesting, as with the Renaissance-era poem about the cat Jeoffry which is missing, apparently, a left-hand side of the page, and which Passarello reinvents. Other animals that appear include wartime messenger pigeons, the horse that broke Christopher Reeve's back, Arabella, the spacefaring spider, and a maneating crocodile named Osama.
"Jumbo II" worked best, I thought, because in the end it had something to say: as the targets of human cruelty, animals often end up mixed up with our human histories in ways they may never really be able to understand. And yet, this fact entails upon us a kind of obligation to consider them more deeply than we do. Topsy--the "bad elephant" electrocuted at Coney Island--was put on trial much like the human being who killed the president, and yet our attempts to understand Topsy pale in comparison with our attempts to understand why a human being like Czolgosz would do such a thing. We name animals because we see in them reflections of ourselves, but perhaps we should try harder to see and understand them on their own terms.