A penguin pup for Pinkerton

Steven Kellogg

Book - 2001

After dreaming that he is the father of a penguin egg, Pinkerton mistakes both a soccer ball and a football for real eggs, resulting in chaos all over town.

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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
New York : Dial Books for Young Readers 2001.
Language
English
Main Author
Steven Kellogg (-)
Physical Description
unpaged : ill
ISBN
9780803725362
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Ages 3-7. In this latest addition to the Pinkerton series, Emily entertains her family with facts from her classroom unit on penguins. Her description of male emperor penguins brooding their offspring by cradling eggs on top of their webbed feet impresses this lovable Great Dane; he, in turn, attempts to incubate a football on top of his paws. The results are predictably unsuccessful and hilarious as Pinkerton wreaks havoc on the classroom, a neighborhood football game, and a dog show. Finally, Granny uses her sewing skills to create a zippered egg containing a stuffed penguin pup for Pinkerton to parent. As always, Kellogg's signature artwork carries the plot, adding humor and details to the deadpan story line. For example, Rose, the family cat, expresses her own thoughts about adding penguin chicks to her diet--and her glee that sibling Pinkerton might be put in jail. This makes a good choice for story hours, especially for fans of this series. --Kay Weisman

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Steven Kellogg's irrepressible pooch returns in A Penguin Pup for Pinkerton. This time around, Pinkerton mistakes a football for a penguin egg when his owner, Emily, reports all she's learned about the animals and their young. But chaos follows when Pinkerton loses track of his baby. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

K-Gr 3-Pinkerton's back-and his new adventures are as outrageous and entertaining as ever. The story starts on the title page, as the oversized pup sneaks off with an unattended football. When his owner, Emily, comes home from school full of enthusiasm and information about their latest topic of study (penguins and their remarkable parenting skills), the Great Dane promptly decides the football must be an egg. When the girl decides to take him and his "egg" to school for show-and-tell, pandemonium ensues. An irate Billy gets his ball back by using a cookie as a bribe. Then on the way home, the dog just happens to find another football (it's in use at the time) and leads football players and spectators on a merry chase through a nearby dog show. He winds up at the empty ice rink, cradling his new penguin egg. Luckily, Granny has made a penguin egg (complete with zipper) and both Pinkerton and Emily are pleased as punch with the baby "Pinkwin" it contains. Kellogg's cheerful, busy artwork offers plenty of extra laughs, from Rose the cat's unsentimental musings (she sees the penguins- and most other animals, including Pinkerton-as potential cat food) to the outraged faces of the people and pets whose lives are complicated by the pup's headlong dash. An engaging story, humorous illustrations, amusing details, and a combination of perennially popular topics make this a sure winner.-Lisa Dennis, The Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, PA (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

(Primary) Steven Kellogg's joyful Great Dane is back for another friendly romp. In this story, Pinkerton's paternal longings are stirred by his owner Emily's new knowledge that a father emperor penguin cradles his egg on his feet throughout the entire gestation period. Pinkerton is inspired: he knows he could be a good father and imagines himself with a passel of baby penguins to care for and love. But his pursuit of parenthood is a little over-the-top. First he absconds with a little boy's football and cradles it on his paws for a whole day (but later trades it for a cookie); then he disrupts a football game; and later he turns a dog show into a rollicking fiasco. Kellogg's watercolor washes and joyfully detailed acrylic paintings tell much of the story, from Emily's love of learning to the image-bubbles that tell what Pinkerton is thinking to his disappointment as his dream seems to slip from his ample paws. Pinkerton's exuberance can scarcely be contained as he bounds out of the borders of the paintings and sits on the lonely blue ice of an empty skating rink, dreaming of polar paternity. Not to worry-Pinkerton's desire for parenthood, of a sort, is satisfied in the end. The young reader can only hope that someday, perhaps soon, Pinkerton will have some puppies of his very own. (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The latest Pinkerton from Kellogg is a bit too all over the place to sustain an actual story line, and Pinkerton is too distracted to play even a fantasy role of a father. Emily learns in school that father Emperor penguins cradle their chick's egg on their feet through nine long weeks to keep them warm. Pinkerton, a Great Dane dreaming of his own flock of penguins, decides he is going to cradle a white football he has found. This he does until a dog biscuit distracts him, allowing the owner of the football to reclaim his equipment. As Pinkerton is being led home through the park, he spies another football and kidnaps it, busting through a dog show for good measure. He is located at the neighborhood ice rink, where he is sitting patiently for the football to hatch. A quick substitution by Granny (whose been sewing stuffed animals throughout the story) insures the return of the football and a successful hatching for Pinkerton. As an agent of mayhem, Pinkerton has no equal, and preposterous stories can be good fun, but this one just never gets on track: Pinkerton is too self-involved for the idea of fatherhood to seem appealing to him. Still, this gives Kellogg a chance to showcase his wonderfully busy, magnetic artwork. It keeps everything humming along on the visual plane so much so that there's no need for a real story to back it up. (Picture book. 4-7)

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.