5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The Backstory, November 9, 2006
This review is from: Five Little Piggies (Paperback)
Nice concept. Like a "This Little Piggy" behind the scenes rockumentary. David Martin and Susan Meddaugh flesh out the complete story of the five little piggies. The book opens up with the traditional "This little piggy went to market. This little piggy stayed home," essentially as a table of contents, introducing us to the five little piggies. Martin then devotes a chapter to each of the petite porcine protagonists, fleshing out the stories behind each individual trimeteric line.
They open strong, with the piggy going to market to pick up eggs, milk, and apples. She riffs all the way there, ultimately confusing herself, "...Megs and milk and maples. Pegs and pilk and papples." By the time she gets to the store, she's forgotten what she is buying and needs to go out to search for some visual cues to remind her. There's some more word play, and she shows up home with the groceries and further malapropisms. The supermom pig catches on quickly and plays along, "Oh, they're delicious pooples... And here's a great big BUG for my silly piggy wiggy." The book also closes strong, with the Little Piggy who cried "Wee Wee Wee" all the way home. The little pinky-toe piggy gets up from a neighborhood sandbox mudfight and, with a concerned expression, begins to cry "wee wee wee," out of the frame. Through five more frames, over the next three pages, until she final runs into the bathroom. Leaving the bathroom, she is finally back to her usual cheerful face: "Oh!... That felt good. I really had to go."
The three little piggies in between seem to have more forced stories. The one who stays home spilled his juice, dropped his cereal, and then split his pants. His mother then lets him stay home from school. The next day, the other piggies spill their breakfast hoping to stay home, but the second metatarsal piggy is seen donning his orange backpack and eagerly leaving for school. The piggy who has roast beef? He's sick of slop. But to get the roast beef taste better, he asks for his roast beef to be decorated with squashed bananas and rotten eggs, "last week's soup and a squishy pickle," until he is eating essential slop with roast beef in it. I was a little let down by this one. I thought there was an opportunity to explore the dark, ironic side of this line of the verse, the domesticated omnivore feasting on a domesticated herbivore. Likewise, chapter four, the piggy who had none, drops his ice cream and let's go of his balloons in his distress. Then, in a near tangent, the other piggies come down with chicken pox, except for the piggy who had none. He protests the lack of spots and his mother draws some on him. That's about as much depth as we get there.
Cute book overall, but calls from a strong vocal performance from parents for maximum effect.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Hilarious background stories of "five little piggies", September 18, 1998
By A Customer
This book contains five short stories of "five little piggies" (this little piggy went to market, etc.). The illustrations are wonderful and the short stories hilarious. It's an excellent book for your child who is just learning to read. It is funny enough that parents and/or grandparents will enjoy reading it with their favorite little ones.
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1.0 out of 5 stars
I gave it away first chance I got, January 17, 2011
This review is from: Five Little Piggies (Paperback)
I got this book from a relative who was a retired teacher. The format is terrible, and the narrative is unbearable to read.
Don't get me wrong! I love reading to my kids, and I'm not expecting Shakespeare for preschoolers, but this book went to the Goodwill a week after the first time I read it.
As a final note, my kids (aged 4 and 6 at the time) didn't exactly miss it either.
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