Build, dogs, build: a tall tail

Book Cover
Average Rating
Publisher
Harper, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers
Publication Date
[2016]
Language
English

Description

Join head foreman Duke and his crew of worker dogs on a busy day of construction fun in this colorful picture book written and illustrated by James Horvath. With lively scenes showing accurately illustrated vehicles in action, this book will be a joy to read out loud for truck-obsessed readers and their parents!

In Build, Dogs, Build, our favorite doggy construction team is pulling down an old building to make way for a new one! Using equipment like cranes, bulldozers, dump trucks, and cement mixers, these busy dogs must race to finish the job in this fun follow-up to Dig, Dogs, Dig.

More Details

ISBN
9780062357052
9780062357069

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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

This is one picture book that junior truck and construction fans won't want to miss, from the arrival of foreman Duke and his hard-hatted canine crew to demolish an old building (Wreck, dogs, wreck!) to their mission-accomplished pool party on the rooftop of the new one. Pithy rhymed verse leads novices through the making of a multistory building, while digital illustrations provide admirable attention to details such as the menu on a hotdog truck. Always bustling and occasionally frenetic with energy, the cartoonlike characters are consistently engaging to watch. This colorful offering is a worthy sequel to Horvath's Dig, Dogs, Dig (2013).--Phelan, Carolyn Copyright 2014 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

The hardworking canines from 2013's Dig, Digs, Dig replace a dilapidated apartment building with a gleaming high-rise tower in this companion book. "The crane is in place./ The angle's correct./ Get the ball swinging now./ Wreck, dogs, wreck!" writes Horvath before a page turn reveals a colossal "boom" as the wrecking ball does its thing. From subterranean pipeworks and a 10-inch concrete base to finishing touches ("The last thing to do/ is install the doorbell"), children get a ground-up tour of how a building comes together. Paint mishaps, a "fetch" break, and other canine antics keep the mood light amid all the hard work. Ages 4-8. Agent: Brenda Bowen, Sanford J. Greenburger Associates. (Jan.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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School Library Journal Review

PreS-Gr 2-The canine crew from Horvath's Dig, Dogs, Dig (HarperCollins, 2013) is needed again, this time on a demolition job, so foreman Duke and his enthusiastic pack head downtown. There's an old building there that has to come down to make way for new high-rise homes at Bark Avenue. Their wrecking ball crashes into the structure with a gigantic "BOOM." The yellow bulldozer clears "piles of rubble, and/bricks and concrete/without any trouble," while the red and blue dump truck hauls it all away. Working dogs deserve a treat, so they grab a quick snack at the "R-Coach," which features hot dogs, corn dogs, chili dogs, and the like. The work isn't finished yet; there are trenches to be built for pipes and drains, a foundation to pour, girders to weld, and cables to run. The afternoon break involves a good game of fetch before installing the finishing touches on the interior. All in all, the penthouse, with its terrace and pool, is perfect, and tomorrow the mutts are off to another job. Horvath's cartoonlike illustrations were created digitally, and the dogs are reminiscent of a beloved old Saturday-morning character, Augie Doggie. Youngsters who can't get enough books with pictures of heavy equipment will be attracted to this one.-Roxanne Burg, Orange County Public Library, CA (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Horn Book Review

A crew of energetic construction-worker dogs builds a park (Dig) and demolishes an old building to erect a luxury skyscraper (Build). Previously published as picture books, these abridged editions are re-formatted as beginning readers. While clunky, the rhyming texts will help new readers with decoding. The cartoony digital illustrations capture the pups' industrious frenzy. [Review covers these I Can Read Book titles: Build, Dogs, Build and Dig, Dogs, Dig[cf11].] (c) Copyright 2017. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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Kirkus Book Review

Those canines are at it again (Dig, Dogs, Dig, 2013), this time demolishing an old apartment building and constructing a new one in its stead. After meeting the crew on the endpapers, readers dive right into the project with the enthusiastic dogs, the rhythm and rhyme of the verses building momentum. The wrecking ball first does its job, then the crew clears the site and begins construction, each different task requiring a different type of truck--bulldozer, dump truck, crane, concrete mixer, forklift, pumper--though not all are named in the text. Great vocabulary will really test young builders' knowledge, though those not construction-savvy may need an adult to help them master the terms: rubble, barricades, tier, girders, welding, riveting, fixtures, terrace. Small details in Horvath's brightly colored digital illustrations will likely draw readers back for repeated looks: As in the dogs' first outing, a black cat lurks on every page, joining the crew on the rear endpapers. The energy reaches a crescendo when a truck full of balls crashes near the site--"fetch, dogs, fetch!"--giving readers yet another thing to look for in the pages that follow. While the construction detail does not reach the level of Sally Sutton's Roadwork (2008), this is a rollicking, energetic read that will pump up kids' enthusiasm for building. Order, grown-ups, order. (Picture book. 4-8)]]]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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Booklist Reviews

This is one picture book that junior truck and construction fans won't want to miss, from the arrival of foreman Duke and his hard-hatted canine crew to demolish an old building ("Wreck, dogs, wreck!") to their mission-accomplished pool party on the rooftop of the new one. Pithy rhymed verse leads novices through the making of a multistory building, while digital illustrations provide admirable attention to details such as the menu on a hotdog truck. Always bustling and occasionally frenetic with energy, the cartoonlike characters are consistently engaging to watch. This colorful offering is a worthy sequel to Horvath's Dig, Dogs, Dig (2013). Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

The hardworking canines from 2013's Dig, Digs, Dig replace a dilapidated apartment building with a gleaming high-rise tower in this companion book. "The crane is in place./ The angle's correct./ Get the ball swinging now./ Wreck, dogs, wreck!" writes Horvath before a page turn reveals a colossal "boom" as the wrecking ball does its thing. From subterranean pipeworks and a 10-inch concrete base to finishing touches ("The last thing to do/ is install the doorbell"), children get a ground-up tour of how a building comes together. Paint mishaps, a "fetch" break, and other canine antics keep the mood light amid all the hard work. Ages 4–8. Agent: Brenda Bowen, Sanford J. Greenburger Associates. (Jan.)

[Page ]. Copyright 2013 PWxyz LLC

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School Library Journal Reviews

PreS-Gr 2—The canine crew from Horvath's Dig, Dogs, Dig(HarperCollins, 2013) is needed again, this time on a demolition job, so foreman Duke and his enthusiastic pack head downtown. There's an old building there that has to come down to make way for new high-rise homes at Bark Avenue. Their wrecking ball crashes into the structure with a gigantic "BOOM." The yellow bulldozer clears "piles of rubble, and/bricks and concrete/without any trouble," while the red and blue dump truck hauls it all away. Working dogs deserve a treat, so they grab a quick snack at the "R-Coach," which features hot dogs, corn dogs, chili dogs, and the like. The work isn't finished yet; there are trenches to be built for pipes and drains, a foundation to pour, girders to weld, and cables to run. The afternoon break involves a good game of fetch before installing the finishing touches on the interior. All in all, the penthouse, with its terrace and pool, is perfect, and tomorrow the mutts are off to another job. Horvath's cartoonlike illustrations were created digitally, and the dogs are reminiscent of a beloved old Saturday-morning character, Augie Doggie. Youngsters who can't get enough books with pictures of heavy equipment will be attracted to this one.—Roxanne Burg, Orange County Public Library, CA

[Page 95]. (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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