Reviews

Zoology by Ben Dolnick

kateea7536's review against another edition

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reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.75

Some of the writing in this book was beautiful, especially the descriptions of Henry’s love. However, I didn’t feel like much happened or perhaps more that there was a lack of direction/point to the book, and there were a lot of threads to the story that didn’t feel necessary. I didn’t enjoy the end section because it was just sad, but maybe the point was that things don’t work out… didn’t understand the dog rescuing bit at the end either but maybe I just missed the point. 

alps's review against another edition

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2.0

I liked this book in a three-star sort of way until the last 60 pages or so. Basically, the main character, Henry, is an idiot. He completely tricks himself into thinking that a girl who has a boyfriend may react positively when he tells her how much he's in love with her. It seems like something I would've done in middle school, not something a 19 year old should be doing. Of course, she doesn't react well when he spills his guts, and in order to alleviate his poor little teen heart he decides to go walk around New York City with a goat he freed from the zoo he works at. Is this a good idea? What do you think will happen next? If you answered "The goat will run away" then you're 100% right! How predictable is that. Then, rather than own up to his mistakes to his boss, he tries to cover it up before eventually coming clean, making his entire situation worse. Basically, this book would've been okay if the main character wasn't incredibly immature and stupid.

dannireadsallthetime's review against another edition

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2.0

This has been sitting on my book shelf for ages and I have only just managed to get round to it. Reading the blurb I thought this was going to be something a bit different to read, so I was excited.
Reading this book, personally, was painful. All the way through I kept starting a paragraph and then I'd realised I started day dreaming about other things, this book just couldn't hold my interest.
Its about a boy called Henry who goes to stay with his brother in New York for the summer and gets a job at the zoo.
Henry falls in love with a girl and in those moments that the author describes how Henry feels about her, is if I'm honest, immense, its described perfectly of how you are falling in love with someone and it can be painful, those parts I enjoyed
Towards the end everything goes wrong for poor Henry and I just feel really miserable, he just ends up worse off than he did to begin with.
I also thought the story at the end about Newman was stupid, don't understand the point of it. Maybe there is a deep meaningful point to this book that I just wasn't picking up on? Maybe?
I wouldn't read this again and I wouldn't recommend it. Very disappointing.

beabates's review against another edition

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2.0

I didn't hate it. I didn't love it. I felt ambivilant. The character I liked most was a goat. Is that a good thing?

giantarms's review against another edition

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3.0

It was a book with a goat in it. I think I am no longer able to appreciate these kinds of books. That is, books full of confused people with no actual problems.

Anyway, what do I expect from a book I just happened to notice on the shelf when I was looking for something else?

An enjoyable lunchtime read.

tarynwanderer's review against another edition

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1.0

I can be bored by books, or bewildered by the author's choices, or unable to suspend my disbelief enough to buy into a story, but it's rare that I feel the visceral level of dislike that I felt while reading Ben Dolnick's debut novel Zoology.



Henry Elinsky fails his first year of college. To escape the boredom of living at home with his parents for the summer, Henry accepts his older brother's offer of a place to live in New York City and a job working at the Central Park Zoo. He ends up befriending another summer transplant, Margaret, and bonds with her as various tragedies befall them both.

Zoology is a slim novel, topping out at 300 pages, but it felt longer for me. A huge stumbling block was our "hero" himself, Henry, who is just straight-up unlikeable and not in an interesting way--in an 18-year old man-child way. I kept getting the sense that Dolnick was trying to reach for Holden Caufield-esque protagonist in Henry. But Holden, despite how you may feel about him, felt things and felt them strongly--not just about himself, but about the injustices and hypocrisies he saw in the world around him.

Henry is, by contrast, a boring sadsack. He has no sense of relativism, no curiosity, no unselfishness, no compassion. He gets angry when a girl he likes doesn't want to date him and hopes that by staying friends with her, he'll win her away from her boyfriend. (Um, respect her choice, dude; she said no.) Perhaps I've been spoiled, but the 18-year old boys I grew up with--like my brother and my boyfriend--were not like Henry at all. Thankfully.

Read the rest of this review over at Bookwanderer!

mdabernig's review against another edition

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2.0

I feel kinda bad only giving this two stars because it wasn't bad, it just wasn't great. The basic premise is about a young boy who goes to NY to stay with his brother the summer after he's graduated and his 'coming of age' so to speak and there is some merit in the story, just not enough to really capture you completely. There is some charm to Henry's story - his failed attempt at a music career, his work at the zoo, his friendship with his workmates, his refusal to believe his parents marriage is falling apart, his first love...

I think what lets the book down is that although it is realistic enough, there is a degree of hopelessness in the whole thing for large parts of the book. The girl he's in love with toys with him and although she is at least (mostly) honest with him from the outset, you can't help but feel frustrated on his behalf as she blows hot and cold while enjoying his advances. His parent's marriage does fall apart, his brother all but packs his bags for him...you almost want someone, anyone to just stop and cut him a break and then you remember that you are reading this from the perspective of a young guy who is a biased narrator so you're unsure how much of what we see is an emotional response from him.

Basically the whole book feels like being a teenager again where everything feels much bigger/more important than it is. This book is a bit like that - there is something there, something that could be great but something that hasn't quite found its way yet. I think I'd like to see Henry again with 10 years experience under his belt - he's a nice guy and a likeable protagonist and the scene at the end where he takes control - leaves NY, gets into college and finds something he loves was great to see. You want to see how it will shake out for him because this snap-shot, this summer where he was betwixt and between anything and everything wasn't a real representation of what he was going to be.

This is a quick read and it's good enough, I just think it could have been even better. I like that there wasn't a clichéd HEA and there were some real bright spots interwoven with everything else so it's worth a read if you have a few hours to kill.

megowen96's review against another edition

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4.0

really enjoyed this. hella relatable

danielle_2910's review against another edition

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3.0

3/5 - enjoyed the premise of the book and felt emotionally connected with each of the characters.

thisgrrlreads's review against another edition

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3.0

Sweet, slow-moving book about an 18-year-old working as a zookeepr in NYC. He's not well-liked, he's hopelessly in love and he's stuck living in his brother's girlfriend's apartment. Yes, it's that kind of book.