Albert of Adelaide: A Novel

Albert of Adelaide: A Novel

3.43 of 5 stars 3.43  ·  rating details  ·  404 ratings  ·  154 reviews
At once an old-fashioned-buddy-novel-shoot-'em-up and a work of deliciously imagined fantasy, Howard L. Anderson's dazzling debut presents the haunting story of a world where something has gone horribly awry . . .

Having escaped from Australia's Adelaide Zoo, an orphaned platypus named Albert embarks on a journey through the outback in search of "Old Australia," a rumored...more
ebook, 240 pages
Published July 10th 2012 by Twelve (first published July 1st 2012)
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Michelle
Mar 01, 2013 Michelle rated it 2 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: no one
Recommended to Michelle by: Books on the nightstand, unofficial booktopia
Shelves: 2013-read
Maybe my expectations were too high for this one. It is a book about a duck billed platypus looking for old world Australia written by a lawyer from New Mexico. The only thing remotely Australian about the book is that most of the animals mentioned in the book are indigenous to Australia. It reads like an odd western - the first half of the book has glimpses of the television show Firefly, but that disappears in the second half of the book and we are left with a weak western.

I did learn that th...more
Jeanette
Apr 24, 2012 Jeanette marked it as to-read  ·  review of another edition
Just makes you want to break into song, don't it?

"Mind me platypus duck, Bill,
Mind me platypus duck.
Don't let him go running amuck, Bill,
Just mind me platypus duck."
Vicki
I don't think I'm giving too much away by telling you that Albert is a platypus, and one I predict you will come to care enormously about. The author Howard Anderson is not from Australia, but describes the desert wilderness of Northern Australia as if he were as familiar as a native with the desert, the cliffs, brush and grasses of that terrain.

Albert himself is not a native of Australia. He has in fact just recently escaped from a dreary existence in the Adelaide zoo. Other animals have told h...more
Elizabeth
this is an interesting story told from albert's, a platypus, point of view. albert has fled the adelaide zoo where he has lived most of his life. he embarks on a journey in the outback of australia to find what is mythically known as "old australia." this is a utopia for animals where they are free to roam without fear of being hunted or caged.

as albert makes his journey across the land, he also makes a journey into his awareness of what it means to be a platypus. he encounters all sorts of frie...more
Carolyn
3.5 stars.
A highly original story, and my favorite book with a talking duck-billed platypus as the main character.
Albert, the Platypus has escaped from an Adelaide zoo and travels by train to Tennant Creek. From there he starts on a quest to find the rumored Old Australia, where animals live in peace and he can swim all day.
Carrying only an empty soda bottle, Albert finds himself in the outback desert, a most inhospitable place for a platypus.He soon meets up with other animals,and becomes fri...more
Dawn
A nice read. And then, near the end, it sort of came out of nowhere and touched my heart. Highly recommend, whether you're 10 or 110.
D.L. Morrese
A platypus escapes from a zoo in Adelaide to search for Old Australia where everything is wonderful and free. In the desert, he meets a pyromaniac wombat, an aging Tasmanian devil (who was once a well-known fighter), a roguish raccoon (he’s a foreigner), assorted marsupials, and a several dingoes. It’s a kind of Watership Down Under with anthropomorphized animals interacting with each other in their own culture apart and uninvolved with humanity. It’s also has the feel of an old TV Western story...more
Robyn
Outback Australia is not a setting one would expect for a first novel by a defense attorney from New Mexico. Nor would one expect the main protagonist to be that enigma of the mammalian world, a platypus. Named Albert. Albert escapes the water tank at the Adelaide Zoo which magnified the faces that stared at him for fourteen hours a day through green algae. He hops a train heading deep into the heart of the Outback in search of Old Australia, “the place where things haven’t changed and Australia...more
Lorca Damon
In the spirit of other great talking animal books like The Jungle Book or Dr. Doolittle, Anderson’s work makes you simply forget that these are animals. But this dramatic and violent tale is no Wind in the Willows. These animals just aren’t all that…cute. Certainly, they’re from Australia and we’ve come to associate the platypus or the wallaby with cuteness, but these animals have such vile human characteristics as drunkenness and murderous rage that the reader quickly forgets that these are ani...more
Danny
I will admit I picked up this book because I thought, "A talking platypus? That sounds hiLARious." Then a few pages into it I decided that maybe the story wasn't going to be for me after all. And now after finishing it I feel like I've learned something about the world, and not just the many types of marsupials in Australia.

On the animal front we've got wallabies and bandicoots and kangaroos. There's a wombat and a Tasmanian devil. Then there are the dingoes, which are not marsupials. Just like...more
Clark  Isaacs
Clark’s Eye on Books
By Clark Isaacs
©CIsaacs 2012



Albert of Adelaide
By Howard L. Anderson

ISBN: 978-1-455-50962-0, Hardcover, Pages 240, $24.99, Publication Date: July 10, 2012, Fiction, Published by Twelve Books a division of HBGUSA.

“Albert of Adelaide” by Howard L. Anderson is very reminiscent of “Animal Farm” by George Orwell, which was published in 1945. The main characters are animals that live their parts on center stage though the travails of lives are vastly different.

Albert is a platypus...more
Liz Winn
Australia has produced some of the strangest-looking creatures on earth, not least among them being the PLATYPUS. Duck-billed, beaver-tailed, web-footed Albert of the Adelaide Zoo has escaped captivity in order to flee to Old Australia, a fabled place where life is pristine and wild, like the time before humans arrived. Entirely plot-driven, Anderson’s novel is a funky sort of Australian adventure/Western/road-trip novel where animals wear clothes and carry guns. Follow Albert as he gets in on t...more
Christie Goldenberg
Ok so this latest one was suggested to me recently over coffee. She said that her friend (a bookaholic and fellow reviewer) had begged her to read a book called Albert of Adelaide. When she asked her what it was about her friend said, "I don't want to tell you because then you won't read it" Well it turns out that it is about a platypus named Albert. Yes, it is fiction and No, it is not a childrens or young adult book. This unique premise was enough for me to contact the publisher as soon as I g...more
Marianne
From an uncorrected proof:
Albert of Adelaide is the first novel by Howard L. Anderson. Albert is a platypus who, sick of his imprisonment there, has escaped from the zoo at Adelaide, and has taken the train to Tennant Creek in search of the “old Australia”, a land of liberty, promise and peace that the other animals in the zoo kept whispering about. Albert is hoping to find a world like that of his childhood in the muddy banks of the river Murray, or at least, something that’s better than Adelai...more
Georgette
Holy crap, this book was AWESOME. I never thought, at age 39, that I would utter the words " The duck-billed platypus is adorable." I now have..thanks to this book. It's hard to put it into a genre, because I truly haven't read anything like it. It reminded me- a lot- of Watership Down by Richard Adams. The dialogue and relationships forged by the animals- reminded me a lot of Animal Farm, minus the ominous underlying messages. This is just a book about a duck-billed platypus and his desire for...more
Dan
Every once in a while, it's nice to read something different, the type of book that one doesn't usually read. Albert of Adelaide is decidedly different, and probably not like anything that most people usually read, because it is such an unusual novel. This debut novel is fun, full of adventure, and is about a platypus named Albert who escapes from the zoo in Adelaide and heads into the Australian outback looking for a place called "Old Australia." Yup, that certainly sounds like a different kind...more
James Wharton
Alright, I couldn't decide whether to give the book a 4 or 5 star rating because I still haven't completely figured it out and probably won't be any further along if I do six months from now. Yeah, that didn't really make sense, or did it. That's how the book is too. However, it was extremely interesting. You see, every character is some kind of Australian animal. Albert, the main character, is a platypus who escaped from a zoo. That naturally reminded me of myself. He went into Australia to fin...more
Vanessa Wolf
Albert of Adelaide is everything "Rango" could've been if Rango wasn't "Chinatown" for kids, or rather if the "Wind in the Willows" took place in Australia. Though the time frame is not entirely clear, which I interpreted as a tribute to the Aboriginal concept of Dream Time, there is an implication that it is within a twenty year time frame of modern times. Albert is a zoo escapee on a quest to find the real Old Australia, a paradise, but with no real idea of what paradise is, just what it is no...more
Jo Penney
You know you have read a truly great book when you get to the last paragraph, moist eyed and wondering if there will be a sequel.

Author of Albert of Adelaide, Howard L Anderson has shown not only does he know how to use the English language with the skill of a true wordsmith, but that he can do it without sounding like he is trying. I love that in an author, that art of keeping the reader hooked, and yet never confusing them.

Albert of Adelaide is a wonderful adventure in one platypus's search f...more
Steve Moseley
I've read books that have had talking animals that were for kids (i.e. the Redwall, & Narnia series, and books like "Watership Down"), but this is the first book that I have read where the story had talking animals while at the same time targeted to adults. At least, I don't recall animals drinking Gin and getting hung over in the Narnia books.

Albert of Adelaide is quite a likable platypus that has escaped from and an Australian zoo and is looking for a sort of a promised land where other pl...more
Kwoomac
Ok, I'm giving this book 4 stars even though the writing's nothing special because it takes place in Australia and there are all kinds of cool animals. There are wombats, bandicoots, wallabies, kangaroos, a platypus,a possum, a raccoon, dingoes, and a tasmanian devil! The hero of the story is Albert, a duck-billed platypus. After escaping from the zoo, he goes in search of his idea of Shangri La; Old Australia.

I was kind of confused by the book, because when it starts out Albert's in a zoo. Pres...more
Melissa Sodano
A unique book, unexpectedly full of social commentary and observations on the volatile nature of the human condition. Yet, there are no humans in this book, which augments both its enjoyability as well as the statements Anderson attempts to make.

In a nutshell, Albert is a platypus seeking Old Australia—a romanticized place where the past still exists as a paradise for all individuals. On his own, he cannot seem to find this utopia, but by joining forces with other creatures he hopes to fight his...more
Nina
You have to love a book where a platypus is the protagonist. A platypus who wears a vest, totes a gun, gets into bar fights, and participates in a war against the marsupials. His friend Jack, a wombat, explained his species to Albert as, "We live in deep holes, come out early in the morning or late in the evening, eat some leaves, and then call it a day. What kind of life is that? What is there to talk about? Nothing, that's what. Entire conversations consisting of 'What did you do today, Earl?'...more
C.S.
Sep 28, 2012 C.S. rated it 2 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: fans of 'Rango,' Westerns, talking-animal books, weird books, etc.
CEE'S D10 REVIEWS
Albert of Adelaide – received in a Goodreads giveaway.

0. Plot
1. Characterization
2. Memorable Quotes
3. Favorites and Least Favorites
4. Comparisons
5. Themes
6. Book-In-A-Gif
7. Originality
8. Prose
9. Overall Entertainment Value

Cee rolled...
5, 3, 4, 2

Overview
This is a story about a girl named Lucky a platypus named Albert. He's spent most of his life in a zoo, and he's just found his way out. Adorably equipped with a water bottle and a memory of his mother in the wild, Old Australia...more
Waldschrat
Das Einzige, was Albert von allen anderen Schnabeltieren unterschied, war die leere Limonadenflasche, die er mit sich rumtrug. Das Mitführen einer Flasche und die Tatsache, dass er Hunderte von Meilen von der nächsten Wasserquelle entfernt war, machten ihn zu etwas Besonderem."

Ja, Albert ist ein Schnabeltier und aus dem Zoo in Adeleide (Australien) ausgebüchst, um unberührtes und verwildertes Land zu suchen. Im Zoo kursieren viele Gerüchte über dieses Land und er hofft darauf, noch weitere Schna...more
Michael
I won't summarize the plot. That is already done for you by Goodreads. I gave it three stars, which in my rating system means it was an enjoyable read but a book I will not read again and would only recommend to someone else on a limited, qualified basis. To my my mind this book is one to be read aloud by a parent to a 10-year old as long as you prepared to talk about pyromania, drunkenness, murder, battle, slaughter, and failed dreams; but also friendship, loyalty, perseverance, and pursuit of...more
Cathy Cole
First Line: The county that stretches from Melbourne in the south to Sydney seven hundred and fifty miles up the coast is green with trees and paddocks.

If you're the type of reader who pays attention to the dedication page, once you've read the dedication in Albert of Adelaide, you'll know you're in for something a little different:

"It seems fitting to dedicate this book to an Australian soldier I met at a bar many years ago in Sydney. All I can remember about him was that he had a bad bayonet...more
Nenia Campbell
WARNING: REVIEW CONTAINS CUTE AUSTRALIAN ANIMAL PICSPAM



If you, like me, took one look at that cute, fuzzy platypus on the cover and thought to yourself, "Oh my gosh, it's going to be like Watership Down, but with platypuses and other cute Australian creatures," think again. The only thing cute about this book is the animals- and even they are quick to disillusion you about their cuteness as they set things on fire, kill each other, have stick-ups and robberies, drink, drink more, drink even more...more
Matthew
I picked this up at the library randomly, largely on the fact that it had a blurb from Mary Doria Russell on the back cover. Once I got over the fact that this book has no actual audience--a non-illustrated American western about Australian mammals that is not for children--I got distracted by the author's tendencies to over-describe in detail things that had just happened two or three pages previously. I don't know. I just don't know.

I actually was expecting some sort of over-the-top Animal Far...more
Amanda
Maybe I should just let the Books on the Nightstand podcast tell me what to read from now on. This was another recommendation and this one is fantastic.

The premise is so odd that you feel the need to read it. Albert is a platypus who escapes from the Adelaide zoo in Australia. He's trying to make it Old Australia, the place where life is good and animals aren't locked behind bars. It's a tale animals tell each other in the zoos and sometimes, one gets daring and breaks out.

If you are thinking th...more
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