Elem. – Hot Dog

Salati, Doug. Hot Dog. Alfred A Knopf, 2022. 978-0-593-30843-1. 40 p. $17.99. Grades PreK-2.

Told in spare text, this story of a woman and her long-haired dachshund is no trivial tale. The unnamed pair live in a city and set out on a hot summer morning to run errands. With a to-do list in hand, the woman leads her adorable pup along crowded and noisy sidewalks, and the urban chaos upsets the tiny canine. Refusing to budge another inch, the animal sits down in the middle of a busy street in protest. The guardian scoops up her pet and realizing their need to get away, they head to the seashore by train and ferry. They breathe in fresh sea air and with umbrella in hand proceed to the beach to spend the afternoon. Without a leash, the little dog runs free and enjoys digging in the sand, splashing in the waves, and collecting rocks, which the woman uses to make rock art. As sunset approaches, both of them board the ferry for home. The twosome exit the subway to streets that are now quieter, less crowded and cooler. Feeling refreshed, they return home for dinner and  a “deep ocean sleep.” The lyrical text is sprinkled with alliteration, onomatopoeia, and rhyme. What makes this story shine is the amazing artwork. For the initial city scenes, the images are vertically placed, each framed with a black border. This technique cleverly demonstrates the overcrowding, frenzy and din of the streets, and a few drawings give the dachshund’s perspective. The horizontal pictures at the seaside and of the city at night are unframed and are mostly full or double page spreads, which creates a sense of tranquility and openness. Salati uses pencil, gouache, and Photoshop to craft  illustrations that touch the senses. There are the familiar scents of the city on their return (dog-trash can; woman-vegetable stand). City sounds are portrayed by the overwritten words on the drawings of the traffic jam (Hawwnk…Honk…Beep) and the construction site (Tukka…Tukka…Tukka). The orange and yellow image of pedestrians in the sweltering heat looks almost too hot to touch. The artist creatively represents the wind in the flapping ears and ruffled fur of the pup on the ferry, and the reader can almost feel the gentle breeze as the sheer curtains in the bedroom billow out from the open window. 

THOUGHTS: This outstanding picture book reminds us to take time to relax and enjoy the beauty of the world with those we love. This is an essential purchase for elementary libraries. Young readers won’t be able to wait to take Hot Dog home.

Picture Book          Denise Medwick, Retired, PSLA Member

Elem. – My Poet

MacLachlan, Patricia. My Poet. Illustrated by Jen Hill. Harper Collins, 2022. 978-0-062-97114-2. $17.99. 32 p. Grades K-5.

The recently deceased master of subtle writing, Patricia MacLachlan, bears tribute to the late poet, Mary Oliver in My Poet. Though Oliver remains unnamed throughout the picture book, the comparison to her is undeniable. For most of her adult life, Oliver resided in Cape Cod; MacLachlan, too, was a citizen of Massachusetts and reports that she had a passing acquaintance with the poet. Covering a span of one day, a young girl, Lily, meets the poet she dubs “my poet” at a farmer’s market, and the two explore the woods and seashore and enjoy different animals together. As Lily searches to develop her writing style, the mentor poet guides her to inspirational scenes of nature. Jen Hill’s loosely drawn illustrations evoke the spray of saltwater, the busyness of the farmer’s market, the secrecy of the woods. “My poet” encourages Lily in her pursuit of the “just right” words to compose her poem and Hill’s illustrations are in perfect concert with MacLachlan’s lyrical prose. Used as a mentor text to encourage creative writing or as a calming read aloud, this nuanced book speaks to the sensitive child. Lily’s use of a notebook walking through the woods imitates Mary Oliver’s favorite pastime as a child growing up in Ohio: to escape a tumultuous home life, she would spend as much time as possible outdoors, jotting down poetry in her own notebook, even hiding pencils in tree trunks.

THOUGHTS: I don’t know if I am enraptured by this book because I appreciate the understated prose of Patricia MacLachlan or because I am in awe of the paradoxically gentle yet powerful poetry of Mary Oliver. Either way, the prose offers many openings into discussion of Oliver’s poems (she wrote of fish playing with her toes and a whole volume devoted to her beloved dogs). Even without the mention of Oliver, the book pursues the work of writing for young children or as a mentor text for older ones. The illustrations remind me of Allan Drummond (Green City) are a refreshing fit for the words. 

Poetry          Bernadette Cooke, School District of Philadelphia
Juvenile Fiction