My Dog's a Chicken
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- $4.99
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
Lula Mae wants a puppy, but times are hard and she’ll just have to make do. Her family has plenty of chickens, so she decides maybe a chicken can be a dog.
Pookie, as Lula Mae names her, is an ordinary chicken, but Lula Mae thinks she is very doglike indeed. With a bow in Pookie’s hair, Lula Mae declares her a show dog. When she runs circles around the other chickens, Pookie is a shepherd dog. And when Cousin Tater sneaks up with a snake and Pookie starts bawk, bawk, bawking, well, she’s a guard dog, too. Then Lula Mae’s brother, Baby Berry, wanders away, and who do you think comes to the rescue?
Readers will cheer for plucky Lula Mae and giggle over her beloved Pookie, who quite unknowingly saves the day.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Lula Mae wants a dog, but "these are hard times," and Mama says, "You've got to make do." So Lula Mae picks out the most promising hen in her farmyard the one that "strutted around like it owned the place" and names it Pookie. "Now that's my kind of dog!" she says. Wilsdorf's (Sophie's Squash) Pookie is a terrific creation: goggle-eyed and self-possessed in that inimitably chicken way, and Montanari loads up this very funny debut with countrified lilts and refrains (Mama's response to everything is "Call it anything you like, but it's not coming in my house"). But the real comedy emerges from the epistemological ambiguity at the story's core: Does Pookie know she has been singled out for canine greatness? Montanari and Wilsdorf hedge their bets. Much of the time, it seems like the chicken's natural behavior just happens to coincide with what her eagerly imaginative owner thinks a dog should do. "She's a show dog, a shepherd dog, a guard dog, and search-and rescue dog, too!" Lula Mae declares. Ages 4 8.