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Looking for Bobowicz : A Hoboken Chicken Story

Looking for Bobowicz : A Hoboken Chicken Story

List Price: $18.00
Your Price: $18.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: HILARITY REIGNS IN HOBOKEN
Review:
Quite often a work read by the author (although he/she is not a professional voice performer) is the most enjoyable that one can imagine. This may be because the author knows exactly how he intended the characters he created to sound, and is aware of every nuance and emphasis in his story.

Perhaps one shouldn't even try to determine what makes an author's reading so very special, but simply enjoy it. That's my recommendation for "Looking For Bobowicz" written and read by the irrepressible Daniel Pinkwater. Fans of this author know to expect an offbeat, outre, funny tale, and that's precisely what they'll hear.

Jules Feiffer has said that "Daniel Pinkwater's thoughts don't connect like yours and mine." That's surely the case as we go to Hoboken, New Jersey where some very odd events are taking place. Ivan Itch is a bit discomfited when his parents move from their tranquil home to Hoboken. He's more than upset when his bike is stolen during his first hour in his new town. Further, Ivan or Nick as he prefers to be called hears wild rumors about an immense chicken on the loose.

However, as we know middle-graders are often adaptable, and Ivan/Nick soon makes friends with an unusual group. Among his uncommon cadre are Bruno Ugg, Loretta Fischetti, and Starr Lacawwanna, the moving force behind the library. These young ones are determined to solve a local mystery sans assistance from adults. But, first they must find Arthur Bobowicz.

As off the wall as ever Daniel Pinkwater ladles large helpings of laughs. Who could have imagined that Hoboken would be hilarious? Only this author.

- Gail Cooke

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Pinkwater's back on the Hoboken Beat
Review: I yelped with delight when I saw this on the shelf, and tore into it without further ado. Two minutes in, I was wearing a wide grin-- this is classic Pinkwater.

Pinkwater's Hoboken, like his Hogboro, is a dream city, one that opens itself up to explorers, revealing eccentric locals, funky hangouts and esoteric eats and drinks along the way (Avocado-Lime Soda, anyone?). Books, comics and pirate radio abound-- and there's nary a website in sight. In Pinkwater's hands, Hoboken has a timeless, shopworn feel, grounded in history (fictional and not) but glowingly alive.

The story's not much-- mostly a means of propelling the protagonists through the city-- but it provides a strong framework on which Pinkwater hangs his characteristically sharp dialogue, insightful kid's-eye observations, and obscure cultural references. Figures from previous Pinkwater stories appear here, sometimes with altered names. And you may want to consult your local Blockbuster's collection of Italian Neo-Realism when you're done reading.

Bobowicz certainly feels like late Pinkwater. The book starts with the narrator's family moving out of the suburbs and back into the city, and the characters from The Hoboken Chicken Emergency loom in the background as hazy figures from the past. Still, it's nice to know that, at least in Hoboken, Classic Comics will always be read in basements and librarians will always provide useful, if loopy, assistance to questing urbanites.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Do you feel like chicken tonight?
Review: There is much to be said in praise of any book that revolves around a giant rampaging chicken. It's one of those images that sticks so nicely in the brain. In the case of "Looking For Bobowicz", this is just the latest in author Daniel Pinkwater's poultry chronicles (the first being, "The Hoboken Chicken Emergency", of course). In this tale you may meet delightfully eccentric adults, sane reasonable children, a mysterious phantom, and the memory of a chicken who rocked a town with its flutter.

To his chagrin, Nick (real name Ivan Itch) has moved from comfortable Happy Valley to uncomfortable urban Hoboken, New Jersey. Nick is not pleased with the move (his mother didn't want him growing up with bad suburban influences) but quickly finds some like-minded pals living next door to his new home. He also gets his bike stolen by a mysterious phantom. Before he knows it, he and his friends Loretta and Bruno are rushing to the library to solve the mystery of the phantom and to get back what once was theirs.

In a lot of ways, this book definitely harkens back to Avi's, "No More Magic". Same reading level. Same mysterious being stealing the main character's bike right at the start of the story. Same otherworldly feel to the tale and peculiar kids banding together to solve the crime. And like Avi's book there's a slightly disjointed feel to the narrative. This isn't to say I didn't enjoy the book, though. I mean, a book has won my instant admiration if it contains, at some point, a father telling his son (who is going to try to capture a bat), "if you should get bitten, tell me at once so I can arrange for the series of painful shots". And there was much to enjoy in the tale as well. What kid can't relate to the wonders of exploring a basement full to brimming with mysterious junk? Or reading comic books (of literary classics, no less) while munching on sandwiches and Dreamsicles? Or following a series of clues to a mysterious cave deep below the earth?

There were definitely some odd choices in the story though. The mom of Nick often remarks on the wonderful influences of the big city on kids, which I assumed was a play on those mothers who think that way about the suburbs. The book doesn't dwell much on details and has some of the shortest chapters I've ever encountered. Also, adults' actions are left somewhat mysterious without reason. And there are some definite inconsistencies between the text and the pictures drawn by Jill Pinkwater. Little niggling things like the books saying the chicken was riding on a tricycle when it is CLEARLY riding a two-wheeled bike. But these are tiny matters. In the end the real question is whether or not this book successfully enthralls. And the answer is yes. Yes indeed it does.

So if you are looking for a work of fiction that is a little older reading than your average "Cam Jansen", but you don't want to hand your children something as complex and high-handed as "His Dark Materials", "Looking For Bobowicz" is an excellent alternative. For any kid that loves his or her average chicken mystery, this one takes the cake. It's sly, inventive, and cocky. Ha ha.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: another (chicken) Feather in Pinkwater's cap!
Review: What a fun romp this Pinkwater book is! The book starts out on a gloomy note, with the young protagonist, Ivan, resenting his parents' move to urban Hoboken. Soon he finds 2 new best friends who assist him in sleuthing down a decades-old mystery. The character sketches are rich, but the book is fast-paced and an easy read. This would be a great read-aloud in a 2nd or 3rd grade classroom or a wonderful read-alone for 4th grade and up. Looking for Bobowicz might also be used to inspire older grades in writing local lore adventures. Librarians will especially enjoy the characterization of Starr Lackawanna, the librarian who helps the children solve the giant chicken phantom mystery.


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