The Magician's Elephant is a story of wonder, hope, and believing in the impossible. When orphan Peter Augustus Duchene espies a fortuneteller's tent in the middle of the Baltese market square, he has little idea that life as he knows it will change forever. To find his long-lost sister, the fortuneteller says, Peter must track down the missing piece of the puzzle, a great elephant. Dejected, the little boy walks home. After all, an elephant in the city is like water in the desert - a wonderful thought, but not going to happen.By some lucky stroke of fate, an act of sheer impossibility occurs that night, undermining all rational thought and confirming Peter's wildest hope. A magician performs his greatest trick yet, conjuring an elephant who comes crashing through the theater ceiling to the audience's dismay. Suddenly, Peter knows the truth. His sister, believed to be dead, is alive. From that moment on, a sequence of events occur in a dreamlike guise - so simple, yet so deftly interconnected. DiCamillo writes a beautiful story with an extraordinary ending, illustrating how life is comprised of tiny moments and magic happens when these moments sync together in perfect harmony.
That being said, DiCamillo has a way of making her characters speak in riddles through repetition and vague statements. I don't believe this to be an accidental move on her part. The story is remarkable as most dreams are remarkable and the dialogue lends itself decidedly to the hazy landscape of a dream rather than reality. Both the dialogue and narration, fairly poetic in tone, create the impression that the characters all have parts to play and are waiting for the pieces to fall together, certainly adding to its overall magic.


