The Three Pigs by David Wiesner
Category: Picture Book
Title: The Three Pigs
Author: David Wiesner
Illustrator: David Wiesner
Publisher: Clarion : New York
Publication Date: 2001
Grade Level: 2-5
Genre: Modern Fantasy
Theme: When you face difficulties in life, find a way to change the situation.
Number of Pages: Unpaged
Summary: This rendition of the traditional Three Little Pigs strays from the original story, allowing the characters to leave their own story and enter others, including a nursery rhyme and a fantasy tale complete with a dragon. In the end, they all proceed back onto the pages of The Three Pigs and into the indestructible brick house.
Evaluation: The cheekiness of this version of the classic story makes it a great read for children, and adults, as well. The new direction the characters take, leaving their story and finding themselves on the pages of other children’s tales, makes the story fresh and interesting. The dialogue that takes place “off the page,” as the pigs, followed by characters such a cat and a dragon, join together to physically separate themselves from their own illustrations to, first, blank white pages, then into other books. It is an interesting, original and effective idea. The book would be appropriate for reading aloud, giving the reader opportunity to use different voices, and the illustrations are large enough and simple enough to be seen easily from a distance. The illustrations pair color with black and white, as the characters venture from story to story. The medium seems to be a mix of watercolor, colored pencils, and pen and ink. The illustrations are almost more important than the text, with more of the story going on in the artwork than in the prose. The story itself, with the characters uniquely moving from one tale to another, could generate some discussion in a library setting about the originality, and to what other stories could this concept be applied.