A Dog Wearing Shoes. By
Sangmi Ko. Schwartz & Wade. $16.99.
An unusually affecting
picture-book debut that takes a true story, twists it just enough to make it
feel like a neatly plotted beginning-middle-and-end tale, and presents it with
unusually effective black-and-white illustrations enlivened by little dabs of
color, A Dog Wearing Shoes stirs
emotions far beyond what would be expected from its modest plot. All that
happens is that a little girl finds a lost dog, takes it home, realizes it must
belong to someone, finds the original owner, gives the dog up, and then gets a
pup of her own. But the way Sangmi Ko tells this story – which is based on a
dog-finding experience that her niece actually had – makes it very special
indeed.
At the very beginning, the
tale opens with an obviously bored little girl named Mini riding in a car
driven by her mom in heavy traffic. Suddenly the car screeches to a halt –
Mini’s and her mom’s mouths wide open and Mini ending up with her eyes spinning
(shown as spirals in Ko’s very clever drawing). A dog is sitting right in front
of the car – and it is wearing bright yellow shoes (the only color in the illustration,
and a wonderful touch). The dog, small in size but huge-eyed and with extremely
frizzy ears and tail, is as cartoony as can be, but there is something
instantly endearing and realistic about its obvious enthusiasm. The next scene,
showing the dog running toward Mini’s mom as traffic roars all around and
drivers look on with smiles, befuddlement, irritation or varying degrees of
inattention, propels the story perfectly ahead toward a quick happy ending, with
the dog coming home to live with Mini.
But so simple an outcome is
not to be – and that is what makes A Dog
Wearing Shoes so special. Yes, Mini and the dog bond and play, but after a
while, Mini wants to do things that the dog does not want to do; and the dog
looks bewildered and lost in a rather cluttered room in which furniture, wall
hangings, plants and an old-fashioned sewing machine are lovingly rendered in a
highly attractive artistic style that makes the small pup seem even smaller and
his yellow shoes stand out from his black-and-white surroundings even more.
Mini, increasingly desperate to keep the dog after he starts barking because he
apparently misses his family (Mini’s mom’s suggestion, which Mini refuses to
acknowledge), takes the pup to the park, where everyone admires him, he gets
along wonderfully with other dogs, and he quickly shows how smart he is by doing
a variety of tricks.
However, Mini’s pride gets
the better of her (an illustration of her with enormous eyes and super-broad
smile is laugh-out-loud funny). She lets the dog off-leash (the red leash being
the only colored item here that is not yellow) to fetch a stick – at which
point the dog runs away. Heartbroken, Mini, helped by her mom, searches for the
dog, but they find only one yellow shoe. The next day, Mini and her mom go to
the local animal shelter, where they are lucky enough to find the dog – who
must, Mini now understands, belong to someone who surely misses him. So Mini
puts up bright yellow “found” posters around the neighborhood, and the owner, a
little boy in a bright yellow shirt, does indeed show up, so happy to be
reunited with his pup that he cries tears of joy in a wordless scene that
neatly sums up the very special bond between people and their animal
companions. Mini and her mom cannot help but be happy to have brought boy and
dog together – but now what will they
do? The answer, of course, is that they will return to the animal shelter and
find a dog just for Mini. And that is exactly what they do – in another
wordless scene, in which a caged pup with an ear-to-ear smile bonds so
immediately with Mini that the shelter workers and Mini’s mom end up with
ear-to-ear grins of their own.
What a lovely book this is,
filled with empathy and compassion and the never-quite-realized potential for
heartbreak – and, at the very end, offering information and cautions about dog
adoption and suggesting Web sites to visit to find out more. What Ko has done
so well here is to take a singular occurrence that really took place and turn
it into a story with resonance and meaning beyond the real-world incident that
prompted the tale. Parents who read A Dog
Wearing Shoes with their kids should be prepared for highly insistent
requests for a puppy from the animal shelter – and kids should be prepared for
their parents to discuss the responsibilities and potential difficulties of dog
ownership, which come through almost as clearly here as do the joys.
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