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Hobart

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Hobart yearns to become a world famous tap dancer. Of course, this isn’t easy when you are born a pig. But Hobart is one of the world’s great optimists, and he is convinced that if he can just keep himself and his siblings Violet (an acrobat), Byron (a poet), and Wilfred (a singer) from being turned into pork chops that they can make their dreams come true. Anita Briggs herself narrates, and the high-spirited musical finale will delight listeners of all ages.
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  • Reviews

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Famous pigs Wilbur, Ace, and Babe would be proud of this fine porcine counterpart. Hobart and his siblings are artists who must develop their talents or face a rendezvous with the City Meat Truck. Additionally, they realize they owe thanks to Farmer Mills for raising them in a special environment. Sustained by a dream, hope, and bottle caps, they escape the farm and rise to the challenges they encounter. Anita Briggs leads in the narration of her story. Farmer Mills is proprietary and proud. Each of the pigs has a genuine and earnest young narrator. When they're ready for the performance of their lives, the recording reverberates with their collected talents, set to an engaging score. Budding poets, acrobats, singers, and dancers, listen well! A.R. (c) AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 2, 2004
      Much like E.B. White's Wilbur, who was "some pig," Briggs's Hobart proves a memorable porcine character and supportive barnyard pal. With dreams of becoming a famous tap dancer, Hobart has a tough road to travel. But before he can ever try his clickety-clackety moves on stage, Hobart and his siblings, who have equally creative bents (a poet, acrobat and a singer), must find a way to avoid becoming bacon. Of course, when such a talented family is backed into a corner, they find a way to pool their strengths and save the day. Their down-on-the-farm musical featuring The Performing Pigs (actually a chorus of kids) makes for a fine finale. After a tentative, slightly rushed beginning, Briggs soon hits her stride as narrator, assuming a comfortable rhythm for her pie-in-the-sky story. She is gamely supported by a roster of young performers whose natural-sounding enthusiasm adds color and warmth to the tale. Ages 5-8.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from April 29, 2002
      Newcomer Briggs presents a snappy story featuring four porcine siblings with ambitious aspirations: Violet longs to become an acrobat, Wilfred a tenor, Byron a poet and Hobart a tap-dancer. Yet when an arrogant cow arrives on the farm and greets them, "Hello there, pork chops.... Oh didn't you know? That's what all pigs come to, in the end," the despondent pigs are ready to abandon their dreams. All but ever-hopeful Hobart ("No one seemed to know why Hobart was hopeful, or how he got that way"), who convinces the others to dig their way under the barnyard fence to escape the clutches of the meat man who plans to buy them from the impoverished farmer. The determined quartet spends months in the remote hills, honing their skills until they are ready to return to the farm to perform and raise enough money for the farmer to pay his bills. Briggs slyly slips a message about perseverance and believing in oneself into her narrative, which she peppers with wry lines. When his siblings inform him of their impending sale to the meat man, Hobart protests, "They can't eat artists!" and Wilfred responds, "Artists today, picnic hams tomorrow." Rayner (illustrator of Babe) once again packs a lot of character into her simple halftone drawings. She humorously captures both the exasperation and exhilaration of these spunky swine. Ages 8-12.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

subjects

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:4.6
  • Interest Level:9-12(UG)
  • Text Difficulty:0-3

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