Read more about the article A Review of Jules Feiffer’s A Room with a Zoo (Michael Di Capua Books, 2005; rpt. Hyperion, 2007)
Photo of Janet Ruth Heller by Darrin Goodman

A Review of Jules Feiffer’s A Room with a Zoo (Michael Di Capua Books, 2005; rpt. Hyperion, 2007)

Nine-year-old Julie wants a dog, but her parents say that she must be ten and a half and able to walk a dog by herself before they will get her one.  Julie loves other animals, too, so she talks her parents and relatives into giving her creatures that do not need walking:  cats, fish, a turtle, a hamster, and a hermit crab.  She almost gets a rabbit to keep for spring break from school, but he is sick and dies at her friend Jenna’s home.  Julie lost the parental permission slip when she needed to show it to her teacher. This story is realistic and clearly based on Feiffer’s adopted daughter and the escapades of her pets.  For example, Julie’s cat Timmy vomits and poops when the family travels.  Despite Julie’s attempts at the “Great Experiment” of getting animals to be friends when they are natural enemies, her large ferocious fish Oscar eats a smaller fish before Julie separates them.  One disastrous day, Julie’s father hurts his back, the hamster escapes, Oscar winds up in…

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A Review of Rossini’s Maometto II at the Canadian Opera Company in Toronto

I saw Rossini’s Maometto II at the Canadian Opera Company in Toronto on May 5, 2016.  It was sung in Italian with English translations projected above the stage.  Although this opera is entitled Maometto II, the main character is really young Anna, the daughter of Paolo Erisso, the Venetian leader.  Like many opera heroines, Anna gets put in an impossible position.  Two men love her:  Calbo, a brave Venetian general, and Maometto II, the Moslem sultan who has invaded Italy.  Anna had met and fallen in love with Maometto in Corinth, but he had told her that he was Uberto, a Corinthian nobleman.  When Paolo finds out that his daughter has fallen in love with his enemy, he is furious.   (more…)

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