Have you ever noticed a baby or a toddler's face when it spots a dog? Curiosity quickly gives way to happy smiles and often rollicking laughter at this hairy creature with four legs, a tail, and a scratchy tongue that is so different from them. When parents of young children who love dogs would come into the store asking for recommendations, I didn't have one particular book to suggest. Because there are a number of truly wonderful picture books to choose from, I would ask them what they would like the focus of the book to be. Did they want a book about a dog that tells a funny story, a book that includes many different kinds of dogs, or a book that reveals a dog's nature?
For those interested in a book that tells a funny story, I would often suggest Bark, George, by Jules Feiffer. This delightful story, told with simple language and appealing line drawings, chronicles the tale of a puppy who makes the sound of every other animal imaginable when his mother tells him to "bark". After a trip to the vet, the mother discovers the reasons George sounds like other animals after the good doctor pulls them, one by one, from George's tummy. Delighted that he can now bark like a proper dog, George's mother asks him to do just that for a dog friend of hers. To which George replies (presumably in the vet's voice) "Hello".
For those who wanted a book that includes different dog breeds, but also tells a clever story, Dogs, by Emily Gravett fit the bill. The unkown narrator begins by listing the kinds of dogs she likes: big and small, hairy and bald, spotted and striped...which becomes a casual list of opposites for the child to learn. As well as the clever "opposites" descriptors, the book's endpapers identify all the breeds used in the story. In a surprise twist, the ending reveals the narrator to be a cat whose favorite kind of dog is one that won't chase it.
And for a book that illustrates a dog's heart and soul, the classic Good Dog, Carl, by Alexandra Day is one of the best. In the tradition of Nana, the children's canine nursemaid in Peter Pan, Carl, a fun-loving Rottweiler, becomes babysitter for a day when the mother in the story leaves him to look after the baby while she goes shopping. Knowing just the sort of things children want to do, from the forbidden to the fun, Carl treats his charge to a day he'll never forget. But at the end of it all, being the protector he is, Carl feeds, bathes, and puts the baby to bed, then straightens the house so that mother is none the wiser. Told entirely in pictures, with the exception of the first and last pages, Good Dog, Carl ignites a child's imagination while illustrating the loyal and fun-loving nature of man's best friend.
Three of my absolute PB dog faves!
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DeleteThanks so much for reading my blog. Congratulations on your upcoming book!
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