From Publishers Weekly
In this unforgiving version of the cautionary classic, a scrawny wolf easily dispenses with two little pigs, but engages in a long-running battle of wits with their brother. At the outset, three blush-pink pigs set off to build their houses. The two pigs who build with straw and wood fall victim to a hollow-stomached wolf with mousy-gray fur and yellow fangs. Closely observed details attest to their grim fates; in a postmeal spread, the wolf dabs his mouth with the second pig's blue bandana as white bones protrude from a metal tool bucket and a jar of barbecue sauce (decorated with Moser's self-portrait) lies empty. Moser (Good and Perfect Gifts) then expands on the original. The author's droll product placement calls to mind Wile E. Coyote's preference for Acme equipment (the third little pig does construction with "Wolfe Pruf Cement"). Before the inevitable ending--in which the wolf winds up as stew--the villain invites the pig on three consecutive outings but gets outsmarted every time. Thus the old story gains abundant visual asides and a new subplot, but loses some of its appealingly repetitive "chinny chin chins" and huffing and puffing. What remain in Moser's tense account are a climactic one-two-three pattern and a constant threat of danger to the bald, vulnerable protagonist. Ages 4-8.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From School Library Journal
PreS-Gr 2-With all the amusing alternatives to the traditional "Three Little Pigs," it is somehow satisfying to have a retelling that embraces all the best of the classic. Set amid Moser's marvelous illustrations are the familiar refrains of "let me come in," "chinney chin chin," and "huff" and "puff," and that safe brick house. Pig one and two pay the ultimate price for inferior building materials: a satisfied wolf reclines on the ground, a pail of bones behind him and an empty jar of "Bubba's No Cook BBQ Sauce" beside him. For reasons known only to the author, Big Mama Pig sends her little pigs off on Valentine's Day. Visual humor abounds: "Wolfe Pruf cement," a "Lupus ware" kettle, perky wolf slippers on the third little pig, etc. Though many versions of the story stop with the success of the brick house, Moser continues with the extension of turnips, apples, and a trip to the fair to show just how clever the last little pig is and how foolish the wolf. In the end, the very skinny wolf becomes dinner for a perfectly plump pig. Well written and cleverly illustrated, the book is the perfect choice for replacing tattered editions with inferior illustrations that may be cluttering library shelves or a fine first pick for a growing library.-Jody McCoy, The Bush School, Seattle, WA
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.