Available:*
Library | Call Number | Status |
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Searching... Silver Falls Library | JP BLABEY | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Dallas Public Library | + CHRISTMAS Blabey | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Monmouth Public Library | E B (Christmas) | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Mount Angel Public Library | E HOL BLABEY | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Newberg Public Library | BLABEY | Searching... Unknown |
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Summary
Summary
From the award-winning creator of Pig the Pug comes another laugh-out-loud book, filled with holiday cheer! Santa was coming! 'Twas bigger than big! No one loves Christmas more than Pig. And the world's greediest pug will stay up all night to get his presents! When Pig yips at Santa and finds himself joining in on the flying sleigh ride, things quickly get out of hand in a way that is pure Pig pandemonium.
Author Notes
Aaron Blabey was born in 1974 in Australia. He is an author of children's books and artist who until the mid-2000s was also an actor. His award winning picture books include Pearl Barley and Charlie Parsley, The Ghost of Miss Annabel Spoon and the best-selling Pig the Pug. His other bestsellers include I Need a Hug. Pig the Elf. Don't Call Me Bear, Thelma the Unicorn, and Pig the Star.
He is well known in the field of acting for his roles in two television dramedies, 1994's The Damnation of Harvey McHugh, for which he won an Australian Film Institute Award, and 2003's CrashBurn, before retiring from performance in 2005.
In 2012, he was the National Literacy Ambassador and in May 2015 his book The Brother's Quibble was read by an estimated 500,000 children during the National Simultaneous Storytime. His book The Ghost of Miss Annabel Spoon won the Patricia Wrightson Award from the 2013 New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards, the 2013 Children's Peace Literature Award and was recorded by Nick Cave for the Story Box Library. His 2015 book Pig the Pug won the Young Australian's Best Book Award 2015 in the Picture storybook category and the 2015 Kids Own Australian Literature Award New South Wales' in the Picture Storybook category.The Bad Guys, Episode 1 won the 2016 Indie Book Awards Best Children's book, the 2016 Kids Reading Oz Choice (KROC) Award for Fiction for younger readers, and the 2016 Kids Own Australian Literature Awards (KOALAs) for Fiction for younger readers. Pig the Fibber won the 2016 Kids Reading Oz Choice (KROC) Awards for Picture storybooks and the 2016 Kids Own Australian Literature Awards (KOALAs) for Picture Books.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (3)
School Library Journal Review
K-Gr 3-Pig, introduced in Pig the Pug, is back again in all his selfish splendor. Christmas is coming, and the greedy little pug expects Santa to deliver each item on his lengthy list. Unlike Trevor, a well-behaved dachshund, he refuses to go to sleep on Christmas Eve. He's wide awake when the "portly old gent" pays his visit and makes no bones about calling him out for the scanty pile of presents. "'Hey!' shouted Pig, sounding very unkind. Then he nipped poor old Santa's big, rosy behind!" Santa flees to his sleigh with Pig clamped on tight, and as the reindeer team speeds off, he falls away through the sky. He is saved from utter destruction, miraculously, as the text points out, by landing atop a Christmas tree topped by an angel. Though the ending is rather abrupt, the final glimpse of Pig with wings and a halo is hilariously ironic, since readers can be pretty sure he is unrepentant. VERDICT Clever rhymes and engaging illustrations combine to make this a fun way to convey the message that greed is bad. Highly recommended.-Linda -Israelson, Los Angeles Public Library © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
Pig the pug's selfishness and greed remain unchecked in his third book, in which he's anticipating Christmas with an almost maniacal fervor: "He'd written a list,/ and he'd asked for a lot./ But Santa takes orders,/ so why the heck not?" After staying up late on Christmas Eve, Pig is disappointed by the small stack of presents left for him, so he chases Santa up the chimney, chomping down on the elf's rear end before the reindeer help him make a speedy getaway. As in Pig's previous books, there's little comeuppance or attitude reform-it's essentially a book about a fairly bad dog indulging his id. Ages 3-5. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Review
In this rhyming story, the latest in a series from Australia, Pig the pug celebrates Christmas in his characteristically greedy fashion. Pig's best pal, Trevor the dachshund, asks Santa for "something nice" in a neatly printed letter shown on the front endpapers. But Pig has a Christmas list a mile long, ranging from a motorcycle to longer legs, reproduced in blocky print on the back endpapers. Wearing a red Santa suit, Pig stays up waiting for Santa's arrival. When Santa leaves only a few presents, Pig yells at him rudely and tries to detain him by biting "poor old Santa's big, rosy behind!" Pig doesn't let go, and he is dragged along as Santa returns to his sleigh, with Pig complaining that his pile of presents "is just not enough." (Sharp-eyed children may wonder how Pig talks when his teeth are clenched on Santa's rear end.) The greedy pug finally falls from the flying sleigh, and in "a real Christmas miracle," he is saved by landing on an angel at the top of an outdoor Christmas tree. The visual humor of the dog clamped onto Santa's seat is funny (if a dog biting someone can be funny), but Pig's greedy, ill-mannered comments to Santa are not. Mixed-media illustrations emphasize Pig's bulging eyes, which are echoed in the similarly buggy eyes of Santa (who is white), his reindeer, and even Trevor the dachshund. Kids will find the premise comical, but as far as a rewarding Christmas story is concerned, a dog-bites-Santa joke "is just not enough." (Picture book. 3-6) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.