![]() ![]() He strikes out with Modoc to the teak plantations of Burma, is captured by rebels, loses his wife, confronts North, journeys to the US and fashions a spectacular show for Modoc, wins back his earlier love, only to have the elephant sold out from under him again. North Bram stows away on the vessel transporting Modoc, leaving behind the girl of his dreams discovered, Bram wins over the captain, but the ship sinks during a hurricane Modoc and Bram float to the shores of India, where Bram learns further tools of the trade at the maharaja's elephantarium there he lives in a teak-built compound, tends to Modoc, and is honored to have an audience with the sacred white elephant he woos and wins a woman from the village but is warned that North is on his trail. That he does, and the tribulations and pleasures they share defy the imagination: The circus is sold out from under Bram to the sinister Mr. Their love for each other develops early, when Bram is just a toddler and Modoc a youthful one-ton package, and Bram's father on his deathbed councils Bram to watch after Modoc. They were born on the same day, a hundred years back, in a Black Forest village: Bram Gunterstein, son of a circus animal trainer, and Modoc, an Indian elephant headed for big-top life with the Wunderzircus, a provincial troupe. The simply astonishing, exhilarating story-complete with high adventure, betrayal, and resurrection-of Modoc, elephant extraordinaire, told by Helfer (The Beauty of the Beasts, 1990). ![]()
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