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* School Library Journal Best Books of the Year
* New York Times Book Review Notable Books
* Riverbank Review Books of Distinction Finalist
* BCCB Blue Ribbon Book
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Edition: Paperback: 40 pages
ISBN-10: 1416918000
ISBN-13: 978-1416918004
Ã¥ Å©±â : 22.8cm x 20.3cm
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Book Description
Murphy, a farm terrier, describes a day in his life as he gets fed in the kitchen, hunts mice, goes to the vet, returns to the house for dinner, investigates a noise outside, and retires to the barn for sleep.
From the Publisher
"Murphy-Stop-That is my name. I am a terrier. I bark. I bark at anything and everything and all the time."
As he goes through his day -- barking, eating, outsmarting the dumb animals on the farm, putting up with a visit to the vet -- Murphy never loses his doggy enthusiasm, even when he has to sleep out in the barn.
In her charming new tale, acclaimed author and illustrator Alice Provensen shows that every dog -- even a bad dog -- has his day.
The New York Times
What is so refreshing about Alice Provensen's book A Day in the Life of Murphy is the scruffiness of the title character. Murphy may speak in the first person, taking us through the events of his day, but we'd never mistake him for a person in a dog suit. As we watch him raid the pantry, or endure a visit to the vet, or yap at the moon, we can almost smell him, and he smells canine, which in the antiseptic world of picture books is high praise indeed.
Publishers Weekly
"Provensen's animated oil paintings follow the amiable, wide-eyed dog through the ups and downs of his day, which ends on a pleasant, predictably noisy note," wrote PW.
Children's Literature
The author of this book has managed to crawl into the mind of an impish little dog named Murphy who lives with his human family on a farm in the country. The entire text is all Murphy's thoughts with an occasional word from his owner to stop barking! Murphy knows how to beg properly at the table and not get caught. He knows where the food bag is kept and how to steal a bite to eat. He gets nauseous on car rides and is in terror during his vet visit. The illustrations are folksy and whimsical. Young readers will delight in and empathize with all the antics that Murphy gets into during his day.
School Library Journal
Farm terrier, Murphy-Stop-That, shares a day in his life in this fun adaptation of Alice Provensen's picture book (S & S, 2003). Narrator Jason Harris gives Murphy a scrappy personality with an eager demeanor and often breathless voice. The first-person account follows what appears to be an ordinary day in the life of Murphy which turns out to be filled with scads of mischief, lots of food, and even an unwelcome trip to the vet. Provensen illustrates Murphy's day with unusual vocabulary words such as "whirring," "snivel," and "lolling." However, sensitive parents might also be wary of an abundance of the word "dumb" in the text. The narration is brought to life with sound effects and upbeat background music. One side of the recording has page-turn signals.
Kirkus Reviews
Not a whole lot happens in Murphy's day beyond scavenging for food, a trip to the vet, and a flurry of late-night barking, but that's not really the point. The point is Murphy himself, a wide-eyed, hairy little terrier whose energy communicates itself through an all-upper-case text and staccato sentences. Murphy appears as a mass of wiry black hair, frequently rendered in multiple across a page to further emphasize his boundless enthusiasm. The oil illustrations feature a flat perspective with liberal use of white space; this provides a static background that further highlights Murphy's antics. Provenson departs from lofty themes, delivering a spot-on interpretation of the inner life of a terrier, and the humor in many of the scenes is priceless. There is so little story that readers who do not share the author's evident enthusiasm for dog psychology may well be unimpressed; dog lovers, however, should lap this up. |
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