City Dog, Country Frog
City Dog, Country Frog book cover

City Dog, Country Frog

Hardcover – Picture Book, June 8, 2010

Price
$12.10
Format
Hardcover
Pages
64
Publisher
Hyperion Books for Children
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1423103004
Dimensions
10.24 x 0.38 x 10.27 inches
Weight
1.24 pounds

Description

Amazon Best Books of the Month, June 2010 : Over the past decade, Mo Willems and Jon J. Muth have each created some of the most memorable animal stories for young readers. Working collaboratively for the first time, these award-winning authors have produced a picture book tale that is as fresh and timeless as the genre itself. City Dog, Country Mouse brings the joy of unexpected friendship and the beauty of the seasons into focus. The two seemingly incompatible animals--a free-range frog and a curious urban dog--teach young readers of the endless possibilities that unfold when we share the best of ourselves with each other. --Lauren Nemroff From School Library Journal Starred Review. PreSchool-Grade 2—Spare, poignant, and ultimately upbeat, this tale depicts the natural cycle of friendship from an enthusiastic first encounter to contented companionship to the heartbreak of loss and eventual emotional renewal. Presented with a comfortingly consistent narrative structure, the events are set against the backdrop of the changing seasons, reassuring readers that winter will turn again to spring, sadness to joy. In "spring," City Dog runs free in the countryside for the first time ever and discovers an unfamiliar creature perched on a rock. Asked, "What are you doing?" Country Frog smiles and replies, "Waiting for a friend…but you'll do." The two play Country Frog games ("jumping and splashing and croaking") and when reunited in "summer," they enjoy City Dog pastimes ("sniffing and fetching and barking"). In "fall," Country Frog is tired, so the friends spend their time remembering. When City Dog arrives again in "winter," Country Frog is nowhere to be found (a wordless spread shows the pooch sitting on the rock, looking small and forlorn against a stark winterscape). In "spring again," a sad-looking City Dog befriends another critter with a familiar line, and then beams "a froggy smile" (shown in close-up, this warmly illustrated grin guarantees that Country Frog will not be forgotten). Making expert use of color and texture, Muth's expressive paintings clearly convey the tale's emotional nuances. This understated picture book allows plenty of room for young readers to interpret the animals' feelings for themselves and perhaps discuss their own emotions.— Joy Fleishhacker , School Library Journal (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. From Booklist *Starred Review* The book begins in spring. City Dog comes to the country, thrilled to run without a leash. Something stops him—Country Frog. Frog’s waiting for a friend: “But you’ll do.” After that the duo plays together, and Frog teaches Dog about splashing and croaking. In the summer, City Dog returns and runs to see Frog. Now it’s his turn to teach Frog games, replete with sniffing, fetching, and barking. In the fall, Country Frog is tired. “Maybe we can play remembering games.” And that’s what they do, remembering jumping and splashing, sniffing and barking. In the winter, snow is everywhere, but Frog is gone. When spring returns, a chipmunk comes across City Dog. “What are you doing?” she asks. City Dog replies sadly, “Waiting for a friend.” Then he smiles a “froggy” smile and adds, “But you’ll do.” It’s hard to imagine a picture book that more consistently (and touchingly) hits all the right notes. Willems, never one to overwrite, is gracefully spare here, making every word count. That leaves room for Muth’s watercolors, richly seasonal, which fill each page. The pictures are imbued with hope and happiness, leaving and longing. This wonderful collaboration makes a significant impact with subtlety and wit. Adults and children will each take away something of their own. Preschool-Grade 2. --Ilene Cooper In Willems's latest, a departure from his urban sensibility as well as his first book as solely the author, a dog from the city explores new territory when he moves to the country and befriends a frog. The book follows the friends through the seasons. A picture book of this length could feel endless, but this glides along as the friends share country-frog and city-dog pastimes in spring and summer. Fall becomes a time for slowing down, and then in winter City Dog's friend disappears, an event foreshadowed in fall by a gentle image of the frog's "hand" resting on the sleeping dog. Just when readers may find themselves reaching for the tissues, a new friend shows up for the dog in this smart and subtle meditation on life, love and loss. The author provides the perfect amount of humor to keep things from getting too heavy, and Muth's astounding watercolors lend incredible depth, guiding readers easily from emotion to emotion as well as from season to season. The image of a happy dog treading water with a frog on his head says it all. Kirkus"It's spring vacation for City Dog, and he joyfully heads across the country meadow, unleashed. Down by the water, he makes a new friend, and Country Frog teaches him some games-jumping, splashing, croaking. Come summer, City Dog returns and this time takes the lead-sniffing, fetching, barking. In the fall, Country Frog is tired, and the two are content to simply rest and reminisce on Frog's rock. Winter comes, and so does City Dog, but "Country Frog was not there." Spring comes again, and...let's just say that this is not a book about hibernation. The text of the rhythmic, almost circular story is brief and quietly declarative, few words stretching to even three syllables, and calmly centered in the middle of the white left-hand pages while Muth's watercolors fill the right. These are expansively glorious evocations of each season's rural splendors, with the homelier figures of our heroes providing an empathetic link to the landscape. The ending, in which City Dog finds a new friend, is bittersweet; a tough lesson gently put. Horn Book"Muth (Zen Shorts) sets a limpid rural scene for Willems's (Naked Mole Rat Gets Dressed) two unlikely friends in this tranquil tale of change. One spring day, redolent with fresh yellow-greens and pale blues, City Dog tastes life "without a leash!" Exploring a reedy pond, he meets Country Frog, who teaches him "jumping and splashing and croaking." When summer arrives, City Dog demonstrates "sniffing and fetching and barking." Fall brings orange-gold foliage and a brown cast to Country Frog's emerald skin. In wintertime, City Dog trots through the snow to find Country Frog's favorite rock unoccupied. A closing chapter, "spring again," shows City Dog encountering another animal and repeating the same greeting Country Frog met him with the year before. Willems's concise sentences, paired with joking illustrations in his other works, lose their hilarity--but gain significant emotional weight--when matched with Muth's watercolors. Pink blossoms and red maple leaves allude to Japanese art; Muth pictures Country Frog as a wise tutor who tosses a stick for his apprentice and, in a rain shower, protectively holds a leaf over the dog. The understated episodes acknowledge the transitory nature of the seasons and of life itself. PW"Spare, poignant, and ultimately upbeat, this tale depicts the natural cycle of friendship from an enthusiastic first encounter to contented companionship to the heartbreak of loss and eventual emotional renewal. Presented with a comfortingly consistent narrative structure, the events are set against the backdrop of the changing seasons, reassuring readers that winter will turn again to spring, sadness to joy. In "spring," City Dog runs free in the countryside for the first time ever and discovers an unfamiliar creature perched on a rock. Asked, "What are you doing?" Country Frog smiles and replies, "Waiting for a friend but you'll do." The two play Country Frog games ("jumping and splashing and croaking") and when reunited in "summer," they enjoy City Dog pastimes ("sniffing and fetching and barking"). In "fall," Country Frog is tired, so the friends spend their time remembering. When City Dog arrives again in "winter," Country Frog is nowhere to be found (a wordless spread shows the pooch sitting on the rock, looking small and forlorn against a stark winterscape). In "spring again," a sad-looking City Dog befriends another critter with a familiar line, and then beams "a froggy smile" (shown in close-up, this warmly illustrated grin guarantees that Country Frog will not be forgotten). Making expert use of color and texture, Muth's expressive paintings clearly convey the tale's emotional nuances. This understated picture book allows plenty of room for young readers to interpret the animals' feelings for themselves and perhaps discuss their own emotions. SLJ"The book begins in spring. City Dog comes to the country, thrilled to run without a leash. Something stops him-Country Frog. Frog's waiting for a friend: "But you'll do." After that the duo plays together, and Frog teaches Dog about splashing and croaking. In the summer, City Dog returns and runs to see Frog. Now it's his turn to teach Frog games, replete with sniffing, fetching, and barking. In the fall, Country Frog is tired. "Maybe we can play remembering games." And that's what they do, remembering jumping and splashing, sniffing and barking. In the winter, snow is everywhere, but Frog is gone. When spring returns, a chipmunk comes across City Dog. "What are you doing?" she asks. City Dog replies sadly, "Waiting for a friend." Then he smiles a "froggy" smile and adds, "But you'll do." It's hard to imagine a picture book that more consistently (and touchingly) hits all the right notes. Willems, never one to overwrite, is gracefully spare here, making every word count. That leaves room for Muth's watercolors, richly seasonal, which fill each page. The pictures are imbued with hope and happiness, leaving and longing. This wonderful collaboration makes a significant impact with subtlety and wit. Adults and children will each take away something of their own. Booklist" Mo Willems (www.pigeonpresents.com) is New York Times best-selling author and illustrator of picture books and early readers that have changed the face of children’s literature. He has been awarded a Caldecott Honor on three occasions, and two of his Elephant and Piggie early readers have received a Theodor Seuss Geisel Medal. His most recent picture book is Naked Mole Rat Gets Dressed, of which Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books wrote: “Willems continues to be a master at conveying an amazing amount of emotion and humor using . . . minimal elements” in a starred review. This is the first book he has written and not illustrated. Jon J Muth is the author and artist of the New York Times best-seller and Caldecott Honor book, Zen Shorts . He has illustrated many award-winning books, including another New York Times best-seller, A Family of Poems , by Caroline Kennedy He is also the writer and illustrator of The Three Questions , which the New York Times called “quietly life changing.” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • In spring, when City Dog runs free in the country for the first time, he spots Country Frog sitting on a rock, waiting for a friend. “You’ll do,” Frog says, and together they play Country Frog games. In summer, they meet again and play City Dog games. Through the seasons, whenever City Dog visits the country he runs straight for Country Frog’s rock. In winter, things change for City Dog and Country Frog. Come spring, friendship blooms again, a little different this time.Mo Willems’ spare, poignant text and Jon J. Muth’s expressive watercolors team up to tell a story that will resonate with readers of all ages.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(216)
★★★★
25%
(90)
★★★
15%
(54)
★★
7%
(25)
-7%
(-25)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Deep, but subtle

This is a wonderful book. I'm a sucker for the emotional richness of Muth's artwork, and it gives the simple story the breadth that it needs to allow children (and parents) to discover a wealth of ripples there. Among the themes present (which not all reviewers seem to have given credence):

1. Very different people can be friends.
2. In the process of being friends, they teach each other about their different worlds, and maybe even create a new one together.
3. People that we love sometimes leave us (and it's nice here that we don't overtly know whether the frog died, hibernated, or moved on, because loved ones leave in a wide variety of ways that may have nothing to do with us). It's also nice that they do the remembering part in the fall, as this will resonate with how many young people interact with their elderly relatives.
4. We miss the people who we've lost, but they leave their imprint on us (that froggy grin).
5. Life goes on. I totally disagree with those who think that this means that the message is "friends are disposable" -- quite the opposite, dog spends a whole season in mourning, and is still sad when spring arrives. But then he takes what he learned from frog and applies it to the trip back to point 1, making a new friend with the possibility of new discoveries.

Anyway, none of this stuff hits you over the head, but all the sensations are there in the delicate lighting of the watercolors. My 2.5-year-old and I have enjoyed reading it very much, and I expect that we will enjoy it in ever-changing ways as she gets older. That's a rarity.

This feels like a collaboration of two great artists, like when Yoyo Ma does albums with Indian tabla players and the like -- they each recognized the power of what the other was doing, and imagined that a combination might allow good things to happen. I have no idea whether that's actually how this book came to be, but I hope so -- it certainly worked!!
38 people found this helpful
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The beautiful illustrations and childlike qualities of the dog make this ...

This is a special book. As the negative reviews have expressed, it is not the "goofy" book that we have come to expect from Willems. It deals with death and loss of a dear friend. Having just lost my father, I have a tough time getting through it without choking up. For my young daughter who just lost her grandfather, all she knows is that he was there, and now he is not. The beautiful illustrations and childlike qualities of the dog make this an important book for children who have lost a family member or even a beloved pet, as well as for any other child who inevitably will lose someone special to them eventually. I am a believer in teaching our children about the ways of the world, in a gentle, caring way. This book is a beautiful example of how to do this.
15 people found this helpful
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A Big Ol' Country Frog Smile for This One

After reading criticism about the ending of this story (including some of the reviews below and the comments that follow), I have to share my own experience with this book. People have said that the ending is too sad for young children, teaches that "our friends are replaceable," or that the ending is missing altogether. I couldn't disagree more.

SPOILER AHEAD! BE WARNED!

I'm a children's librarian who has read this story countless times in classrooms and at library storytimes. When the story ends, I love asking the children what they think happened to Country Frog. Leave it to cynical adults (myself included) to immediately jump to the conclusion that Country Frog croaked. Children have answered that Country Frog is hibernating, has moved to a warmer spot, is off looking for food, or is hiding in the water. A few have said that they think he died, but none were beside themselves with grief about it. Several children have observed that Country Frog changes colors, which leads to a discussion about amphibians and other animals.

I've never felt that Willems is teaching that our friends are replaceable. Rather, it seems City Dog comes to understand that Country Frog will not be coming back, but he can keep a piece of Country Frog's spirit with him by greeting his new friend with a Country Frog grin and his memorable line, "but you'll do." Isn't that pretty hopeful? The book also ends with spring, which carries its own set of metaphors about hope and renewal.

If nothing else, this book can teach adults a valuable lesson: children are optimistic, creative thinkers, and even if they have not fully grasped the concept of life and death, they understand that things end and change, but life must go on.

Finally, I have to commend the book's creators. Muth's gorgeous watercolors easily convey the sense of wonder City Dog feels when he visits the country, and Willems has an uncanny ability to communicate incredible depth through very accessible wording. To be able to make the switch from silly and fun titles to a slower, more thoughtful story with such success is a rare feat.

I've added this book to my list of all time classics, and I'm sure I'm not alone.
11 people found this helpful
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Not prepared to read a book about death of a loved one to my 3 year old on Christmas

I bought this book as a Christmas gift for my 3 year old daughter, based on recommendations from amazon.com and the reviews I read briefly. Admittedly, I didn't read all the reviews in detail, but my daughter loves all of Mo Willems' books, so I thought it would be a safe bet. After reading the book, I looked at the reviews again, and I'm not surprised that I missed that this is a story of two friends, a dog and a frog, and the frog ages through the seasons and finally (presumably) dies. This might be a wonderful book for a family needing to discuss loss with a child, but that's not what I had in mind when I got this book. I'm disappointed. It's a lovely book, but I was not prepared to discuss the circle of life with my daughter at bedtime tonight. I write this review just to be sure you know what you're getting when you order this.
11 people found this helpful
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Unexpectedly beautiful

I was hoping for a nice book to read with my daughters, nothing more. As we were turning the pages I started to suspect we were in the midst of something special. When we got to the scene where the dog was waiting for the frog who couldn't be there my four-year-old wanted to know why I was staring at the page for so long. Ok, she said, frog's not there - read the next page. We finished the book, and after a moment's reflection she asked me why the frog didn't come. I really almost lost it.

Wholeheartedly recommended. One of finest meditations on life, aging, and death I have ever encountered.
11 people found this helpful
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A Simple Story About Love, Loss, and Friendship

I'm a huge fan of Jon J. Muth and Mo Willems...so this book seemed like an obvious choice to add to my children's home library. I bought it without having a clue as to the premise of the story. I just assumed I'd like it...and so I did. As did my two girls.

The story itself -- about the friendship between two unlikely individuals -- is simple, even sparse at times. A few pages don't have any words at all, some only have one. But it's jam-packed with all sorts of good stuff (the nature of friendship, loss, grief, acceptance, the passage of the seasons and time, the overarching cycle of life) and is a great way to initiate deeper discussions between parents and children. When I first read this to my then four-year old, she was particularly curious about what happened to frog -- where did he go? why didn't he come back? -- and we explored the possibilities. The next time we read it, we talked about how the scene changed with the seasons. The book was such a hit in our home that we eventually donated a new copy to our preschool where it has become a much cherished story.

The illustrations are pure Muth -- realistic yet whimsical. Dog and frog are incredibly expressive and the natural settings around them are a lovely compliment to the story.

For parents or teachers who want to introduce some deeper topics to young children (without freaking them out too much), give this book a try.
5 people found this helpful
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wonderful book about the circle of life, loss and rebirth

I bought this book after reading the review in the NYT. I probably would have bought it no matter what because I love Muth's books (Zen Shorts, Zen Ties, and The Three Questions are among our favorites). But it ended up a serendipitous choice for my five-year-old son as our elderly dog had just died and we had just gotten a new puppy. So the idea of missing and remembering old friends while treasuring new friends was perfectly a propos. The story runs deep and deals with death and loss but is told with a light, airy, simple touch that in no way brushes past the impact of our emotions about such changes. Muth's watercolors are lovely as ever. A wonderful book.
5 people found this helpful
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Friendship

What joy the city dog and the country frog share as they teach the other to play their games! Separated by the seasons as the city dog visits in the country this book could lead to interesting discussions. The importance of making new friends and sharing differences abound in this short tale. And what interesting stories might be the result of the city dog's new friend at the end of the book. A simple read with life's true meaning.
5 people found this helpful
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The WORST message ever.

Beautifully illustrated, but the message is HORRIBLE. SPOILER ALERT! Not only does the dog's best friend, the frog, die...so unnecessary, but also the dog moves on in a HEARTBEAT. Upon realizing the loss of us friend, he meets a new friend and say, "I guess you'll do." Talk about loyalty lost. And fickle friendships. No time to morn, just move on with a new replacement. What the heck is this supposed to be teaching kids?!
4 people found this helpful
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Beautiful, spare, moving story

Ostensibly a book about friendship and the seasons, as City Dog and Country Frog play and share throughout the spring, summer and autumn; the story takes a sudden, although not entirely unexpected turn towards loss. On City Dog's first day in the country, he encounters Country Frog sitting on a rock, "Waiting for a friend... but you'll do." In the spring, they play frog games. In the summer, dog games. In the fall, they reminisce about what a good spring and summer they've had. When City Dog excitedly runs out to Country Frog's rock during winter, "City Dog looked for Country Frog./Country Frog was not there." What follows is a gorgeous two-page wordless watercolor spread of City Dog sitting forlornly atop the rock, gazing out towards the leafless branches of the nearby wood. "That was winter." Devastating! This is so beautiful, so well-done and it's so spare. You know that Country Frog isn't coming back. He's gone.

In the following spring, a still sad City Dog is sitting by the rock, when he encounters Country Chipmunk. The story comes full circle when City Dog tells Chipmunk that he's "waiting for a friend" and after smiling "a froggy smile" he tells Chipmunk, "But you'll do."

Stunning watercolor illustrations and sensitive handling of a difficult topic earn this book my highest recommendation for ages 4-8.
4 people found this helpful