Boys Are Dogs
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- $4.99
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
The book that inspired the Disney Channel movie Zapped, starring Zendaya!
When Annabelle returns from summer camp, her life is totally different. She's moving to a new house with her mom's new boyfriend, and that means starting sixth grade at a brand-new school. Birchwood Middle School is very different from her old all-girls elementary-the boys practically run wild in the hallways. And at home, Annabelle's new puppy is taking over the house and chewing on her clothes. But the puppy came with a training manual, so Annabelle might be able to get one thing under control. Unless . . . can you train a boy the way you train a dog?
Look for the other books in this series, Girls Acting Catty, and Everybody Bugs Out!
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The premise of Margolis's (Fix) effervescent story a girl uses the techniques from a dog-training manual on boys has been seen before (e.g., Sandra Dee in If a Man Answers), but rarely has it been so well grounded and developed. Right before the start of sixth grade, Annabelle returns from sleepaway camp to move into the house that her single mother and her mother's sensitive if geeky boyfriend have just set up. Their surprise gift of a puppy, Annabelle realizes, is their attempt to "bribe" her into liking the new arrangements, but she loves the puppy anyway. School, on the other hand, is a battleground, especially because it's Annabelle's first time going coed. Margolis gets the details of middle-school boy behavior just right: the boy sitting behind Annabelle torments her with endless kicking; her two lab partners hog the equipment; others play keep-away with her homework. When Annabelle does connect the dots between puppy training and communicating with boys, her breakthroughs come across as genuine. The story lines melded household, moving, boys as dogs coalesce naturally, giving girl readers a thoughtful story along with, just possibly, some substantive boy advice. Ages 8 12.
Customer Reviews
Ok book bit reverse sexism
This book was ok but calling boys dogs is kind of reverse sexism