How the Big Bad Wolf Got His Commeuppance
By (Author) Arthur Geisert
By (author) Lisa Wilke Pope
Enchanted Lion Books
Enchanted Lion Books
31st August 2021
16th September 2021
United States
Children
Fiction
813.6
Hardback
40
Age range 6 to 9
When the Big Bad Wolf goes after three little pigs in Iowa, he's ill-prepared for just how inventive they can be!
What if the three little pigs' mother warned them about the big, bad wolf so that they could plan for and even count on his huffing and puffing In this creative retelling, readers will be just as astonished as the wolf to discover how each pigs' strategic engineering unexpectedly leads to the familiar happy ending.
Award-winning master etcher Arthur Geisert returns to his Clayton County, Iowa trilogy in this follow-up to Pumpkin Island. But this time, Geisert is back with his legendary pigs, whose remarkable resourcefulness and can-do spirit saved the day in Ice and The Giant Seed! Paired with Geisert's inventive and intricate illustrations, debut talent Lisa Pope Wilke's understated and droll text is sure to surprise and delight. Geisert and Wilke both live in Elkader, Iowa, where Geisert creates children's books and Wilke serves as the director of the public library.
Struggling to keep her family afloat, a mother pig tells her three children that they have to seek their own fortunes. The classic narrative framework is here: The wolf tries to eat each pig at a house made out of grass bundles, a house made of a large pile of construction materials, and one that is a stately castle. But each pig has a calculated plan for thwarting the wolf, who eventually slinks back home. The pigs clever constructions, conveyed in Geiserts trademark detailed illustrations, will enthrall children who love to build things (or take them apart): Theres a complicated mechanism for blasting the wolf with flour; a house under construction that puts itself together when the wolf huffs on it; and one that releases an intricate alarm system of horns and whistles when the wolf puffs on it. The illustrations, hand-colored copperplate etchings, have a distinct and inviting texture Vivid descriptors are used to bring the wolfs exertions to the page: Famished and desperate, the Big Bad Wolf huffed and puffed and blew mightily. The worldbuilding in the illustrations is thoughtful and elaborate and will have readers poring over the pages. An entertaining delight for (nonpig) budding engineers everywhere. Kirkus Reviews
In Wilke Popes wry reimagining of the porcine chestnut, the plucky pigs thwart the hungry wolf in elaborate and unexpected ways, dusting him with flour, utilizing his breath to blow a house into shape, and blasting him with sound, forcing him to retreat to the comforts of a hot bath in an elaborate footed tub Geiserts fantastically detailed etchings, alive with twitchy lines, nervy hatchings, and dusty-hued washes, feature the woebegone wolf making his way through a chaotic rural landscape of wandering roads, ramshackle dwellings, and repurposed junk, and the convoluted contraptions of clever swine. Publishers Weekly
Award-winning childrens book author Arthur Geisert has been creating etchings and hand-coloring them for picture books for over forty years. Geisert, who grew up in Los Angeles and learned to etch at the Otis Art Institute, has spent his entire adult life in the Midwest. He now lives on Main Street in Elkader, Iowa. Geiserts work has appeared in the New Yorker and Horn Book Magazine. It also has been collected by various museums and has been exhibited at The Art Institute of Chicago. In 2010, his book Ice was selected as a New York Times Best Illustrated Book, the third book on the list for Geisert. In recent years, he has published The Giant Seed, Thunderstorm, and Pumpkin Island, the first book in his trilogy about Clayton County, Iowa. How Big Bad Wolf Got His Comeuppance is the second book in the trilogy.