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Summary
Summary
Things you'd expect to find in the bathtub-
1. Soap bubbles
2. Rubber duckies
3. Shampoo
Things you don't expect to find in the bathtub-
1. Walrus
As it turns out, once a walrus settles in for a nice long soak, it's pretty darn hard to get him out. What's a family to do? This silly-sweet story will keep readers giggling as a family tries--and tries again!-to evict their unexpected houseguest . . . before finally realizing why he's there in the first place.
Author Notes
Deborah Underwood grew up in Walla Walla, Washington. Her father was a math professor and her mother taught English. After college, she became a street musician, then she worked in an office typing memos for accountants. During her breaks she would write screenplays. She finally decided to write for kids. Deborah also started writing nonfiction at the suggestion of her publisher.
Her children's titles include: The Quiet Book, The Christmas Quiet Book, A Balloon for Isabel, Sugar Plum Ballerinas, and The Loud Book. Her nonfiction titles include: Mexico or Bust, Animal Secrets, 101 Ways to Save the Planet and Ballroom Dancing. In 2014 her title, Here Comes The Easter Cat, made The New York Times Best Seller List.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (4)
Publisher's Weekly Review
When a family moves into a new house and finds that a walrus has full ownership of the bathtub, there's only one thing to do: make a pros and cons list. "Bad things about having a walrus in the bathtub: 1. Clam shells / 2. Screechy seagulls / 3. Bathtub tidal waves." As the son in the family generates successive lists ("More bad things... People who will not help you get a walrus out of a bathtub"), the soaked occupants seem to have no choice but to abandon ship. But when the walrus counters with a list of his own ("How to make your new family feel welcome"), a brighter side becomes apparent ("3. Indoor puddle jumping!"), and everyone lives happily-albeit damply -ever after. Underwood's list-focused text is a fast, fun read and could inspire imaginative classroom projects around improbable list-making. Hunt's big, boisterous cartooning makes the most of this variation on The Man Who Came to Dinner: the family tries to stay calm and roll with the punches while the extra-large, genially oblivious center of attention-who strikes poses worthy of Rubens and wears a polka-dotted shower cap-keeps pouring on the annoyances. Ages 4-8. Author's agent: Erin Murphy, Erin Murphy Literary Agency. Illustrator's agent: Bright Agency. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Horn Book Review
A family moves into a new home and finds a walrus in the tub. The son catalogs the attendant problems: "bathtub tidal waves," "wet towels," etc. After attempts to evict the walrus fail, the family resolves to move again...until the walrus explains its actions. This riotous yarn about seeing the glass half-full is awash in visual gags. (c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
A family of four's new house is perfect save for one feature.It has everything they need: a big yard, a tree with a sea gulls' nest in it, and an enormous bathtub. But there's one problem: In that huge bathtub, there's a walrus. And he doesn't want to leave. He makes bathtub tidal waves, he floods the house, and he uses all the toothpaste. The family members do their best to convince the walrus to leave, and little readers will get a few good chuckles out of the increasingly absurd tactics. The text is conveyed almost entirely in list form, with occasional snippets of dialogue and arrows pointing to various pictorial elements when necessary. The "WORST things about having a walrus in the bathtub: 1) Dial-a-Clam deliveries 2) Pool parties 3) Walrus songs" leads naturally to "Things that are louder than walrus songs: 1) Nothing"; underscoring this is the walrus's not-so-tuneful "AAAAHHHROOOOOOOOOOOOHHHHH!!!" The illustrations are suitably kinetic, milking the absurdity of a walrus in a bathtub for all it's worth, and they add a narrative subtext, depicting one child's evident delight in the presence of the family's unintended roommate. Unfortunately, compositions are so busy, chock-full of silliness plus additional characters such as the family's dog and the walrus's visiting friends, that it may be hard for little readers to focus on that relationship. The family members all have light skin and straight hair that's either black or brown.Overdone, even for a tall tale. (Picture book. 3-4) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
A lesson in creative coping is couched in this book starring an unexpected, unwanted houseguest. A family of four moves into a new house and finds a walrus already in residence tusks, flippers, and tail stretching out of a bubble bath. Bewildered by this unusual situation, they try a series of comical ideas to encourage the walrus to leave (a clam giveaway, disguising one child as a killer whale, having the father dress up like a lady walrus, calling a plumber). Most of the narrative is in list form, courtesy of the big brother, who enumerates what's best about the new house, and what's worst the walrus in the bathtub. Candy-colored digital artwork crowds the pages but appropriately reflects the chaotic atmosphere of the house. Just as it seems the family will give up hope, a misunderstanding is revealed that allows them to turn the negatives of having a walrus into positives. The humor is pretty effortful here, but the emphasis on adjusting and understanding is well played.--Connie Fletcher Copyright 2018 Booklist