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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Dog Blue Paws Up!
Dog Blue is the story of Bertie, who loved the color blue, and dreamed of owning a blue dog that would go with his blue sweater, blue shoes and blue dog collar. Bertie longed so for a blue dog that he pretended patting, feeding, walking and playing fetch with his imaginary dog. He even yapped like a dog and that's when a dog yapped back and he met his dream for real. But...
Published on December 1, 2004 by Don Gardner

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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Bertie needs counseling, not a dog
A young boy named Bertie has an unhealthy fixation on the color BLUE. He soon extends this obsession to a pet. We witness imaginative play where Bertie hallucinates that he is petting, feeding, and walking his blue dog, even dragging the leash and collar along the ground. But since "pretend dogs don't fetch sticks," Bertie must take his psychosis to the next level: now he...
Published 23 months ago by Jason Kirkfield


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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Dog Blue Paws Up!, December 1, 2004
This review is from: Dog Blue (Hardcover)
Dog Blue is the story of Bertie, who loved the color blue, and dreamed of owning a blue dog that would go with his blue sweater, blue shoes and blue dog collar. Bertie longed so for a blue dog that he pretended patting, feeding, walking and playing fetch with his imaginary dog. He even yapped like a dog and that's when a dog yapped back and he met his dream for real. But his dream dog didn't turn out quite as he imagined. Bertie decides to adjust his dream to accept the ways his real dog differs from his expectations. Readers enjoy a clever plot plus a wise lesson. Polly Dunbar's cartoon-like pencil and watercolor illustrations set Bertie alone on a yellow page as he develops his dream dog. Upon meeting his dog the background turns blue while Bertie works through adjusting his dream. Once the plot turns out Bertie and his dog are again on a yellow background. In her simple drawings the reader may sense we are experiencing Bertie's inner vision of his dream. Changing background colors signals entering and leaving a transition period. Dog Blue uses the simplest art and text to trace the course of a desire, a dream, and a decision in a subtle and profound way. It is also good fun.
For children from two to five.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Dog Blue is a keeper, September 6, 2004
This review is from: Dog Blue (Hardcover)
An uplifting simple book for children over 2. The simple story line, happy characters, and warm ending provide a great story or night time before bed book. A story of how a boy who loves dogs finds his perfect cannine partner and the fun they have together provides some good laughs. Nice artistry, well written, and short (5 minutes). Dog Blue quickly became a favorite for my 3 year old son. Highly recommended from a picky parent.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ingeniously Simple, June 24, 2005
This review is from: Dog Blue (Hardcover)
Young Bertie loves blue and he loves dogs. In the best of all scenarios, he'd combined his two loves and have a blue dog! The color blue is easy. Bertie has a blue sweater, blue shoes, and a blue collar. Blue dogs are at all not easy. In fact, getting a dog of any color is not easy, so Bertie just pretends he has one.

As nimble and imaginative a toddler as you'll meet, Bertie walks and feeds his dog, and "he threw a stick for his pretend blue dog. But pretend dogs don't fetch sticks. So Bertie fetched the stick himself." He also scratches, sniffs, and chases his tail as a blue dog would. Polly Dunbar's soft illustrations make Bertie seem talented and sweet, rather than foolish. His rosy cheeks and sheer joy at "being the dog" expresses the simple joy of playing-at-something.

Bertie's physical and imaginative activity is interrupted by reality: An actual dog that needs an "owner." Bertie, who tends to think in absolutes, slightly recoils and cries when he realizes that the "perfect" dog is not blue. Dunbar's background turns from an innocent, happy yellow to a thoughtful, grey-blue, full of shadowy doubt and complexity. Bertie, in a stroke of simple genius, makes the dog blue, by making the dog.... "Blue!"

Bertie and Blue, now on yellow-backed pages, make a "perfect pair!" Bertie learned to expand his schema of the "perfect dog" to accommodate non-blue dogs named "Blue," and Blue, just happy to have the love of a boy like Bertie, accommodates the latter's play idea. "Bertie took Blue for a walk. Blue took Bertie for a walk. Bertie fed Blue. Blue sniffed Bertie... Blue really loves Bertie. Bertie really loves Blue. Especially when... [next page]
it's Bertie's turn to fetch."

There is such a feeling of freely given love in this book that it takes a few reading to appreciate it. Bertie's conditional love, common to toddlers and adults alike, turns unconditional when he accepts the dog. The dog will never be blue, just as kids and adults may never meet their idealized companion. Yet, Bertie opens his heart to the dog, and in his eyes, he is as true a blue as he could hope to find." If this were the days of "Jonathan Livingston Seagull," the book would be a potential best seller for adults. The book makes no such claims or pretensions. It's a humorous, clever, and warm illustration of love for toddlers, and it's perhaps a parable for adults, all in the form of a simply told and simply illustrated kids' book.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Dog Blue - a Bedtime Favorite, January 27, 2009
This review is from: Dog Blue (Paperback)
This is a sweet, simple book about a boy who wants (and gets!) a dog. It's perfect for the little boy or girl who loves dogs. I thought the high points of the story are that the boy makes the best of what he has and is grateful even though his dog isn't blue colored, and also that he takes good care of his dog. Good lessons for young kids.
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5.0 out of 5 stars it's a shame more people don't know about this book, October 22, 2011
This review is from: Dog Blue (Paperback)
_Dog Blue_ tells the story of a young boy, Bertie, who has always wanted a pet. Not just any pet. A dog. A blue dog.

Bertie fantasizes about his imaginary blue dog to great effect in the simple but articulate illustrations. When our protagonist is confronted with a real life four-legged friend, he is faced with a choice: be disappointed in reality, reject an opportunity, or adjust his expectations. Bertie's reaction is portrayed with humor and sensitivity by Polly Dunbar.

A winner for kids 2-8 years old.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Bertie needs counseling, not a dog, March 1, 2010
This review is from: Dog Blue (Paperback)
A young boy named Bertie has an unhealthy fixation on the color BLUE. He soon extends this obsession to a pet. We witness imaginative play where Bertie hallucinates that he is petting, feeding, and walking his blue dog, even dragging the leash and collar along the ground. But since "pretend dogs don't fetch sticks," Bertie must take his psychosis to the next level: now he *is* a blue dog. He barks like a dog, eats sticks, even scratches himself!

Act II reveals Bertie to be the lucky recipient of a real dog. Yet he almost sinks into depression--sobbing into his hands and subsequently curling up into the fetal position--when it turns out to be a beautiful, spotted, black and white (but not BLUE) dog.

Thankfully, a sudden inspiration allows the dog to be BLUE in name if nothing else, and everyone lived happily ever after. Too little, too late.


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Dog Blue
Dog Blue by Polly Dunbar (Hardcover - July 22, 2004)
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