Dogtripping tells the cross-country move from California to Maine of the author and his entourage, including rescue dogs – a fun read.
Monday, September 28, 2020
Book Review: New Tricks (Golden Retriever? murder mystery, New Jersey)
Dogtripping tells the cross-country move from California to Maine of the author and his entourage, including rescue dogs – a fun read.
Sunday, September 20, 2020
Book Review: Halo, Disaster Response Dog (Dutch Shepherd pup, FEMA, dog training)
Monday, September 7, 2020
Book Review: Stick Dog Tries to Take the Donuts (apples, donuts, thinking, dogs)
Stick Dog Tries to Take the Donuts (Book 5 of 11), by Tom Watson (Harper, 2016, 208+ pages, $12.99HB, grades 3-7)
The. Longest. ShortStory. Ever.
Written on lined paper like the tablets elementary school students use (or used, in the olden days, with a fat pencil), Stick Dog is unique. The best thing, in the eyes of parents and teachers, is the size of the words: some are long (and advanced) so your third grade reader will expand his vocabulary exponentially and include you in the reading often (to ask what a certain word means, after you have successfully figured out your child’s pronunciation attempts!)*
“. . . provide Stick Dog a little more time to figure out what his instincts were trying to tell him. He considered* this choice when something happened. And then something else happened.” (p. 123)
Five dog friends surviving on their own, their pictures as if drawn by a little kid. A Dalmatian named Stripes, a Karen doxey, a Mutt, Poo-Poo the Poodle, and Stick Dog, of course, their leader with brains. And the dogs are getting hungry and hungrier.
“There are nine more donuts in here,” Stick Dog said [to his four canine friends}. “That works out perfectly You all get two each.” (p. 145)
On their hunt for food like apples, they discover donuts! And Karen finds she loves, loves, loves coffee and what it does to her. Now, how to get more donuts and coffee. . . .
If you liked Hank Zipzer, you’ll like the Stick Dog books: Mutt stores things in his fur, Karen discovers she likes coffee, the reader will read about friendship and may, must may guess at the next exciting thing to happen to our group of canines!
“And that’s when Stick Dog got his idea. Do you know what it was? Sorry. I can’t tell you everything. I’ll just have to show you in the story.” (p. 124)
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Caveat: This book was purchased for review.
*verification, fierce, manipulated, etc.
Sunday, August 30, 2020
Book Review: Because of Winn-Dixie (girl, found dog, the South, summer, new friends)
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Blu-Ray |
“Kate DiCamillo is the author of many books for young readers. Her books have been awarded the Newbery Medal (Flora & Ulysses in 2014 and The Tale of Despereaux in 2004); the Newbery Honor (Because of Winn-Dixie, 2001), the Boston Globe Horn Book Award (The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane, 2006), and the Theodor Geisel Medal and honor (Bink and Gollie, co-author Alison McGhee, 2011; Mercy Watson Goes for a Ride, 2007). She is a National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature Emerita, appointed by the Library of Congress.” (https://www.katedicamillo.com/press.html)
Saturday, August 29, 2020
Book Review: The Puppy Primer (training curriculum for the trainer and the new puppy family)
Tuesday, August 18, 2020
Book Review (OT): Hitler Youth (true stories of the youth movement)
* Newbery Honor Book
A YALSA Best Book for Young Adults
A Booklist Editors' Choice
A Bulletin Blue Ribbon Book
A Kirkus Reviews Best Book of the Year
A Publishers Weekly Best Book of the Year
A School Library Journal Best Book of the Year
Winner 2005 Parents' Choice Gold Seal Award
Saturday, August 1, 2020
Book Review: Dogversations (What dogs say behind the scenes about their photos)
We all talk to our dogs but do you carry on a two-sided conversation with yours, perhaps on a walk where nobody can hear? Do you tell him the schedule for the day? When she comes to you with those big puppy-dog eyes, do you hate having to tell her that dinner is still an hour away? Do you and your dog chat as you are putting his paws in place for the perfect photo shoot – only to find he has moved them the instant before you clicked the camera?
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Puppy Eva's Puppy Dog Eyes "Dave, why is this cardboard keeping me in the kitchen?" |
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"Dave, love this soft laundry hamper but little Julia's cat pajamas have got to go!" |
But, dogs are like potato chips: you can’t have just one.
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Eva: I have so much bossing around planned for this puppy! Life is good! |
Every dog training center should have a poster of Jailbreak (below): Bruno climbing out of his X-pen in the bedroom. It’s a good thing Bruno is so cute!
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Bruno: Dave, can't talk now. Busy escaping! |
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Hammocking with Daniel and Julia: Who is who? |
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Puppy Agnes with Every Dog's Dilemma |
*reprinted with permission of the author