Bad Bears in the Big City An Irving Muktuk Story Daniel Manus Pinkwater Jill Pinkwater 0046442689526 Books

Bad Bears in the Big City An Irving Muktuk Story Daniel Manus Pinkwater Jill Pinkwater 0046442689526 Books
What happened? I loved Pinkwater's first book about Irving and Mucktuck. I was looking forward to more fun word play and fun adventures. Alas I did not find that with Bad Bears in the Big City.
Tags : Bad Bears in the Big City: An Irving & Muktuk Story [Daniel Manus Pinkwater, Jill Pinkwater] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. <DIV>Irving and Muktuk have arrived from Yellowtooth in the frozen North to their new home in the Bayonne, New Jersey,Daniel Manus Pinkwater, Jill Pinkwater,Bad Bears in the Big City: An Irving & Muktuk Story,Houghton Mifflin Harcourt,0618689524,9780618689521,Animals - Bears,Animals - Zoos,Bears;Fiction.,Polar bear;Fiction.,Zoos;Fiction.,Action & Adventure - General,Bears,Children's BooksAges 4-8 Fiction,Children: Kindergarten,Easy Fiction,Fiction,Humorous Stories,JUVENILE,JUVENILE FICTION Animals Bears,JUVENILE FICTION Animals Zoos,JUVENILE FICTION Humorous Stories,Juvenile Fiction,Juvenile Kindergarten Ages 5-6,Lifestyles - City & Town Life,PRESCHOOL PICTURE STORY BOOKS,Picture Book,Polar bear,United States,Zoos
Bad Bears in the Big City An Irving Muktuk Story Daniel Manus Pinkwater Jill Pinkwater 0046442689526 Books Reviews
This book was absolutely disgusting!!! What was the point of it? What was the lesson that a kid was supposed to learn from it? Handcuffed polar bears? locked up in the zoo? Zoo keepers, etc. afraid that they will eat people? Either I don't get the point of the story or it is just wrong that books like this should be published.
I enjoyed the book because I like the bears and I like muffins too! <3 Sammy, age 8 this is a cute book.
My son thought the book was funny, nice and he liked how Irving and Muktuk were friends. He liked that Irving and Muktuk were given a second chance.
My son is 5, and he loved this book. We had to stop in the middle, and he was very anxious for me to finish reading it (unusual for him).
He likes stories about kids or animals who are naughty, and this is a great one.
We are checking every story book by this author out of the library, and they are all favorites!
This book picks up where the previous one left off, with Irving and Muktuk on a flight to Bayonne, New Jersey, where they will be kept in the zoo (ha!) so they don't steal muffins. The zoo, however, is right across the street from a large muffin factory, and Roy, their fellow polar bear, has privileges he gets to punch out of "work" at the end of each day and go home to his own apartment. Irving and Muktuk observe. They cleverly escape the zoo, enter the muffin factory, gorge on muffins, fall asleep, and are found out. Irving and Muktuk are put on parole . . . most likely the next book in the series picks up here.
Larry the Polar Bear is a great creation. There's "Bongo Larry", "Hotel Larry", "Young Larry", and a few others. Larry's brother, Roy, turns up in the Bayonne Zoo and features in some of the Larry books. Well, Irving and Muktuk also turn up at the zoo, and Roy takes them under his paw. So, there's the polar bear world of Daniel Pinkwater.
If you love the Larry books, but have used them all up or can't find them, the Irving and Muktuk books are just as fun and continue the muffin-loving polar bear escapades.
These books are charming and fun. The humor is dry but accessible to even little readers. They are good "read-to" books. They are not message or problem books, and there are never any awkward missteps where you wonder why the author thought this or that was funny. They are calm and mellow, much like I imagine Daniel Pinkwater to be. Pinkwater's books run from here up to late teen, and all of them are worthwhile, so your reader can be a Pinkwater reader all the while he's growing up. So you've got that going for you, which is pretty nice.
We last encountered Irving and Muktuk, two larcenous polar bears, stealing blueberry muffins ("lots of muffins," Muktuk reminds us) from the frozen North town of Yellowtooth. The bearly concealing costumes did not fool Officer Bunny, and he deported them to the Bayonne, New Jersey zoo. This book opens with the bears on a Bayonne-bound plane, bearing a note from Officer Bunny warning the Zoo Director that they cannot be trusted! The two Pinkwaters depict the zoo as a kind of maximally minimum-security prison. As in a vintage prison film, the longtime resident, polar bear Roy, gives them a few pointers on zoo life. This includes showing the new "convicts" his stashes of muffins, fish cakes, his own private apartment with "a freezer, four air conditioners, and two electric fans,' and teaching them the easiest ways to perform their zoo duties--just swim around, and occasionally wave to people.
The bears are babes in the city, not even realizing that bears can eat people until Roy warns them against it. "You can eat people?" "Don't even think about it," says Roy. Pinkwater's short sentences, while appropriate for his audience, have an additional function They support his ironic, deadpan delivery of some truly bizarre, suspicious, and/or illegal bear behavior. However, Pinkwater also varies sentence and phrase length for comic effect.
Irving and Muktuk spend the evening playing cards and making plans for breaking into the muffin factory. The next morning, the bears sneak out of the zoo (in the book's only confusing line, they escape by inserting playing cards into "a slot under the big clock") and--wearing makeshift disguises that would fool no one--they join a school group touring the muffin factory. Irving and Muktuk are beside themselves when they hear of the free samples, and they work themselves into feeding frenzy that leaves the two polar bears uncomfortably hot. In a deft plot turn, Pinkwater's bears decide to chill by laying on frozen pea bags at a local grocery store! Roy finds them and calls the zoo authorities. Now, Irving and Muktuk are afraid of retribution, a fate worse than their easy job at the zoo, and they beg Roy for help. In a move worthy of Perry Mason, Roy comes up with the "no people were eaten" defense, and the two errant bears are given a second chance, only if they promise to continue to not eat people (this one's easy for them), AND if they promise not to raid the muffin factory again (this one's almost impossible). The bears vaguely agree to the last requirement, but on the last page, Jill Pinkwater draws a wonderful picture of the bears looking slyly, conspiratorially at each other, as if they only they know that stolen muffins will be a big part of their future.
"Bad Bears in the Big City" contains the magnificent dry wit associated with the Pinkwater's bear books, embedded within an incredible yarn that's played straight--as if Pinkwater is merely reporting the facts. Jill Pinkwater's very expressive illustrations, capture the bear's alternating bravado and insecurities, emotions that youngsters can easily identify with. Most of all, the bears' woefully inept plans, their naiveté, and those "no one is looking" sly looks will elicit squeals of delight from your young den of cubs. The next book in the series, "Bad Bears and a Bunny" is a delightfully role reversal farce. In early August of this year, the Pinkwaters released their latest Irving and Muktuk concoction, "Bad Bear Detectives." I'd also recommend looking at the great "Bongo Larry" and "At the Hotel Larry." Larry is a bear who happens to like blueberry muffins...
What happened? I loved Pinkwater's first book about Irving and Mucktuck. I was looking forward to more fun word play and fun adventures. Alas I did not find that with Bad Bears in the Big City.

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