Pushinka the barking fox A true story of unexpected friendship

Lee Alan Dugatkin, 1962-

Book - 2019

Lyudmila Trut, a lead researcher in a silver fox domestication experiment, met Pushinka, a silver fox, that she decided to take the experiment a step further with by moving into a small house.

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Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 2--4--Although nonfiction, this book has a strong story line and an added emotional connection typically displayed in narrative fiction. The text revolves around a domesticated fox named Pushinka, but includes information about the Russian fox domestication program. It is set up as a traditional text on one side with a picture on the opposing side. The pictures tend to be monochromatic with an accent color; some are full-color pictures. The text mostly describes events from Pushinka's life and program notes, then concludes with an emphasis on the significance of friendship and love based upon the events. Paragraphs tend to be on the chunky side and might have been easier to digest if split up. VERDICT The interest level for this work is mid-elementary, but the word choice is a bit more advanced. While the topic is interesting and the information is flushed out, the writing often feels choppy.--Jenifer Pickens, Holmes Middle School, Alexandria, VA

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A sidebar to a true story of fox-domestication experiments in Siberia is presented in this picture book.For 60 years, Russian scientist and co-author Trut has been involved in the genetic experimentation on the domestication of foxes, and this picture book tells a story of her relationship with one particular fox named Pushinka. Pushinka lived in "Lyudmila's" home in Siberia, as did her pups after they were born. Dugatkin and Trut's feel-good story (accompanied by uninspired photos that trot along in a predictable manner) omits the less-uplifting facts. The majority of the foxes used in the domestication experiment live in small wire cages in sheds, and each year the friendliest, as determined by human-administered tests, are selected to breed. The ones not selected are sold to fur farms to become pelts. In addition to selectively breeding foxes for friendliness, Trut also selects and breeds the most aggressive foxes to create hyperaggression in order to study the biology of domestication. Perhaps the most egregious misrepresentation, though, is the schmaltzy attribution of Pushinka's domesticated behavior toward Trut as the result of love. One day Pushinka barks to warn Trut of an intruder: "Foxes DON'T bark! But love, you see, changes us"an assertion that ignores the very science that created Pushinka's behavior: the product of decades of selected breeding, not love. Also, foxes do bark.A whitewashed account that gravely misleads readers. (additional information) (Informational picture book. 5-8) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.