by Jessica Swaim (Author) Jill McElmurry (Illustrator)
After a woman unknowingly adopts a pack leader from the shelter, his furry friends follow in dogged pursuit in this rhythmical, rhyming picture book about doggy companionship, with art by the illustrator of Little Blue Truck.
Lonely Miss Mary longs for a four-legged friend. But when she makes the mistake of choosing the untrained basset hound Blue, no sooner does he howl AH-ROOoooooo! than her house has gone to the dogs!
Dalmatians and dachshunds, sheepdogs and setters, poodles and pups of all spots are ruling the roost. Can Sam the canine trainer teach this menagerie some pawsitive tricks?
A charmingly illustrated, rollicking text offers a doggone good time and a perfectly happy ending.
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Miss Mary Lynn MacIntosh, who "lived all alone" in a stone cottage, makes a classic dog adoption mistake: she picks out the one dog that Sam, the pound canine trainer, tells her has not been obedience-trained. Sure enough, as soon as Blue the basset hound gets to his new home, he "chewed Mary's bathrobe and peed in her shoe, / then lifted his muzzle and hollered AH-ROOooo!" That howl is a clarion call to all the pooches Blue left behind, who escape from the pound and swarm Mary's house--"Retrievers lined up at the toilet to drink./ Chihuahuas swam laps (¡muy bien!) in the sink"--antics that fill the book's spreads. Mary can't possibly manage this mutt mélange, but she can't bear to part with them, either; enter Sam, who not only helps Mary train the lot of them, but also provides the necessary presence to turn a canine comedy into a full-fledged rom-com--complete with a pink poodle-themed wedding. With the cumulative feel of Dr. Seuss's "Too Many Daves," bouncy, mischievous rhymes from Swaim (Why Do I Chase Thee, for adults) and lovingly rendered, doll-like doggy portraits by the late McElmurry (Little Blue Truck) make this a fetching comedy pile-up. Human characters read as white. Ages 4-7. (Nov.)
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