Synopses & Reviews
Review
Christelow's watercolor and pen-and-India-ink cartoonlike illustrations do a fabulouos job of reinforcing the mood and action of the text. . . . A sure hit.
Review
In this rib-tickling sequel to The Great Pig Escape, two farmers seek hogs that are hidden in plain sight. . . .In her casually drawn ink-and-watercolor images, pigs in wigs, scarves and swimsuits grin conspiratorially; when Bert falls off a fishing boat, he doesn't notice he's been rescued by an amiable porcine sailor. The author gets a few more giggles out of a classic comedy plot, pitting brazen outlaws against thickheaded authorities.
Review
Amusing artwork featuring incognito oinkers results in an adventure that will elicit squeals of delight.
Review
"A sure hit...will have readers rolling with laughter." School Library Journal, Starred
Christelow's squiggly lines and dabs of bright watercolor are a perfect counterpoint to the deadpan text, which will have readers rooting for the pigs and laughing as the hapless Bert finds nothing but trouble in this snorter of a hide-and-seek picture book.
Kirkus Reviews
Readers of Christelow's The Great Pig Escape also about these feckless farmers, will know the pigs don't have to worry. And once again, kids will delight in spotting the cleverly disguised swine, who romp about unnoticed under Bert and Ethel's very noses. Fans of Walter R. Brooks' immortal Freddy books may smell an homage in this sprightly story, but others will simply enjoy the farcical search and the cheerful cartoon illustrations that depict it.
Booklist, ALA
In this rib-tickling sequel to The Great Pig Escape, two farmers seek hogs that are hidden in plain sight. . . .In her casually drawn ink-and-watercolor images, pigs in wigs, scarves and swimsuits grin conspiratorially; when Bert falls off a fishing boat, he doesn't notice he's been rescued by an amiable porcine sailor. The author gets a few more giggles out of a classic comedy plot, pitting brazen outlaws against thickheaded authorities.
Publishers Weekly
Amusing artwork featuring incognito oinkers results in an adventure that will elicit squeals of delight.
SLJ Best Books of the Year
Synopsis
A postcard from Florida with a mysterious one-word messageOINK!is the only clue to the whereabouts of the pigs that ran away from Bert and Ethel in The Great Pig Escape. Acting on this slim lead, Bert frantically searches the crowded streets and muddy swamps of the Sunshine State, never noticing the hilariously dressed porkers hiding in plain sight.
Are there pigs under those beach umbrellas, or rocking and rolling to the tunes of the Squealers? Come along with Bert on his great pig search and discover whos hamming it up under the sun.
About the Author
Born in Washington, D.C., Eileen Christelow went to school there and in Connecticut, Tokyo, and Massachusetts. When she decided to write and illustrate picture books for young children, she and her daughter, Heather, "researched the problem together, taking weekly trips to the library and reading at bedtime and nap time." Eileen Christelow and her husband, potter Ahren Ahrenholz, now live in Dummerston, Vermont.