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Nose to Nose

A Picture Book

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From the critically acclaimed author-illustrator of How Do You Dance?, Thyra Heder's Nose to Nose is an insightful and hilarious picture book about trying to make new friends as the new dog in town and the courage it takes to face a problem "nose to nose"
Toby is the new dog on the block, and he can't wait to meet his neighbors. But his attempts to make friends go largely un-sniffed by his busy neighborhood, and Toby finds being new isn't so easy. At least he finds a nice, smelly ball at the park. There's just one problem: The ball actually belongs to another pup, Pancake, who desperately wants it back.
Toby tries his best to explain his mistake, but when his messages get misunderstood, the neighborhood rumors fly: Toby is a bad dog! Beware! Toby doesn't know if he'll ever make a friend, but hopefully by being brave and taking a chance, he can make things right.
This pooch-filled story by critically acclaimed author Thyra Heder playfully unveils the currents of communication happening all around us and champions the courage it takes to confront a problem "nose to nose."
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 10, 2024
      In this witty canine romp, a new dog named Toby “introduces” himself to the neighborhood by lifting a leg against a brick wall, a light pole, and a mailbox (“He introduced himself a lot, actually”). In a loose, sketchbook style, Heder (Sal Boat) lovingly captures the established neighborhood dogs that Toby longs to befriend—a basset hound, a bulldog, and more. Written in graffiti-style text, readers can see the messages the dogs leave for each other on walls and sidewalks. (“My Tummy feels Bad –Merlin” is accompanied by “Merlin, eat grass!”) After checking out “the local postings,” still-excluded Toby finds a tennis ball: “It smelled like puddles and raccoons and fit in nicely with his collection.” But the ball belongs to the basset hound, Pancake, and the whole neighborhood soon gets involved. Suspense builds at length as Toby leaves an apologetic message whose meaning is altered by
      the rain, deepening confusion until his instincts save the day. Heder’s charming canine portraits, especially of doggy actions, make this emotive new-arrival story a pup lover’s treat. Human characters are portrayed with various skin tones. Ages 4–8. Agent: Stephen Barr, Writers House.

    • Kirkus

      December 1, 2024
      A new dog in town has trouble making friends. The pooch introduces himself with a message sprayed in urine on a brick wall: "Hello I am Toby." Unfortunately, other olfactory messages--translated into signage readable by humans in watercolor, pencil, and ink illustrations reminiscent of Shirley Hughes' work in their luminosity and brushwork--drown out the greeting. Worse yet, a further friendly smellogram on the sidewalk is so garbled by rain, garbage collectors, and the feet of passersby that Toby's four-footed neighbors mistake him for a mean dog. What's a lonely mutt to do? Dog lovers will delight in the canine rushes of various Fidos cavorting energetically across the urban scenes and endpapers (human figures remain hazy and peripheral, though seemingly racially diverse) and yelp with pleasure at Toby's distinctly doggy solution to his dilemma. Confronted in the park by a tense, hostile pack, he approaches slowly and then suddenly drops his front end in classic "DO YOU WANT TO...CHASE ME?" posture. The canines respond with a howling chorus of "YES!" and the ice is instantly broken in a wild, gleeful rumpus. Heder may take a bit of artistic license in depicting over a dozen dogs unleashed in an apparently unfenced urban park setting, but young readers who've found themselves in a situation like Toby's will take comfort in the cathartic close. The messages that the dogs convey in urine are hilariously apt: "Suki's stick," "Don't trust the squirrels," and "Anyone for a howl?" A real tail wagger.(Picture book. 5-8)

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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