Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Traditional Literature: True Story


Book Review For:

 
THE TRUE STORY OF THE THREE LITTLE PIGS! Retold by Jon Scieszka. New York: Viking Kestrel, 1989. ISBN 9780670827596


            Children who are already familiar with THE THREE LITTLE PIGS tale will have their brains thinking in a totally different pattern with this tale which is refreshingly told from the wolf’s point of view. The book cover illustration shows A. Wolf’s picture on the front page of a newspaper being held in a pig’s hoof. In this picture, the fact that he is wearing a distinguished, domestic suit and bow tie gets the reader wondering if he might possibly be a good guy. The illustrations throughout the story, however, remain mostly dark, indicating his dark nature, perhaps?


            The wolf starts off presenting his case that he’s really not bad, he just has allergy problems (hence the huffing or sneezing) and needed a cup of sugar for his “dear sweet old granny’s birthday cake” (hence a motive for being at the scene of the crime). One illustration depicts bunny ears sticking up out of the cake mix, which reminds the readers of his natural eating habits and that he’s not so innocent.


            At the first pig’s house of straw, he claims the door merely fell in when he knocked on it, and when no one responded, he was going to head on home. Then he sneezed, accidentally killing the first little pig. (All the illustrations show of the dead pig is a rounded rump sticking up from the dirt, and the wolf is in the distance observing the scene with a hanky!) The wolf says he hated “to leave a perfectly good ham dinner lying there”, so he ate it.


            At the second pig’s house of sticks, the scenario repeats, naturally.


            Still without a cup of sugar, the wolf heads to the third little pig’s house made of bricks and knocks on the solid fortress’s door. According to the wolf, this little pig was very rude, telling him to leave and not bother him. The wolf’s allergies caused him to start sneezing, and the pig hollered that his “old granny can sit on a pin!” This infuriated the wolf, and that was why he was trying to knock down the door and huffing and sneezing when the police arrived. The illustrations show the wolf in action at the scene, from the viewpoint of a news reporter, amidst the police and a microphone. This picture of the wolf is shown in the newspaper on the following page with the headline “BIG BAD WOLF!”


            The wolf says the news reporters didn’t think that wanting to borrow a cup of sugar was exciting enough, so they enhanced the sneezing into huffing and puffing the pigs’ houses down. The wolf is still proclaiming his innocence at the end of the story, and from behind bars, in a striped prisoner’s uniform, holding out a cup with the words “PIG PENN” on it, asking readers to loan him a cup of sugar. This leaves the reader to be the judge of if this was his true motive all along. Was it possible, after all, that he was framed? Or is he full of hot air? (Wink, wink!)


            Although author Jon Scieszka and illustrator Lane Smith have won many awards for other works, I could not find any awards for this particular title. The SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL calls it “the fractured fairy-tale gold standard, with tongue-in-cheek text and sophisticated artwork both darkly sinister and delightfully droll” (Fleishhacker 2012).


After sharing this story with children, one could discuss how it is similar and different than the original tale or ask the children to pick another villain from a different fairy tale and rewrite a story from their perspective.


References

 
Fleishhacker, Joy. "Folk and fairy tales retold: Spin offs." SLJ.com. SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL, last modified July 1, 2012, accessed September 24, 2013, http://www.slj.com/2012/07/books-media/folk-and-fairy-tales-retold-spin-offs-focus-on/.

 

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