The Adventures of a South Pole Pig
The Adventures of a South Pole Pig
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Houghton Mifflin
Annotation: Flora the pig ditches life on the farm for an adventure in Antarctica, where she lives her dream of pulling a sled with a team of dogs.
 
Reviews: 5
Catalog Number: #102741
Format: Perma-Bound Edition
Special Formats: Inventory Sale Inventory Sale
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin
Copyright Date: 2013
Edition Date: 2013 Release Date: 11/03/15
Illustrator: Reinhardt, Jennifer Black,
Pages: 278 pages
ISBN: Publisher: 0-544-54070-0 Perma-Bound: 0-605-88463-3
ISBN 13: Publisher: 978-0-544-54070-5 Perma-Bound: 978-0-605-88463-2
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2012027226
Dimensions: 20 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
Horn Book (Thu Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2013)

Pig Flora is on a boat headed to the South Pole, where she knows she'll find adventure (never mind that Amos the sailor refers to her as his "little ham bone"). Like all good animal adventure stories, this one has a richly drawn cast; dedicated sled dog Oscar will move readers to tears. Thirty-eight fast-paced chapters make this perfect for reading aloud.

ALA Booklist (Tue Jan 01 00:00:00 CST 2013)

Even as a piglet, plucky Flora knows that her destiny lies outside the pen. After watching sled dogs training, she dreams of joining a sled team. In this satisfying chapter book, one wildly improbable (but somehow convincing) event leads to another. Taken aboard a ship for some mysterious purpose, Flora befriends Oscar the sled dog and Aleric the cabin boy. She and Sophia the cat team up to kill off their common enemy: rats. Shipwrecked off Antarctica, Flora saves the captain's life (and her own bacon), but starvation looms and the crew's survival depends on an unlikely sled team: Flora, Oscar, Aleric, and Sophia. Reinhardt's spirited drawings, shaded with crosshatching, add considerably to the book's charm. Described as a teacher and a storyteller, Kurtz shows a good sense of pacing in his first novel. There's humor as well as heart, grit as well as tenderness, in the telling of this Antarctic adventure tale. Recommended for reading aloud.

School Library Journal Starred Review

K-Gr 4 Her name is Flora, and she's a pig. She's curious and longs to explore beyond the perimeters of the pigpen. She dreams of going to Antarctica with the sled dogs on the farm and becoming a sled pig. When she is put in a crate onboard a ship, she sees the expedition as an opportunity while the crew views her as potential pork chops. Then they are shipwrecked and readers will root for spunky Flora as she discovers just how brave and needed she can be. Simple black-line drawings add a welcoming charm. Told in the voice of a seasoned storyteller, this novel has chapters that will work perfectly for sharing aloud with younger children or as a read-alone for more competent readers. Flora will encourage every listener to dream of being their best self. Move over Wilbur and Babe, there's a new pig in town.— Helen Foster James, University of California at San Diego

Reviewing Agencies: - Find Other Reviewed Titles
Horn Book (Thu Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2013)
ALA Booklist (Tue Jan 01 00:00:00 CST 2013)
Wilson's Children's Catalog
School Library Journal Starred Review
Wilson's Junior High Catalog
Word Count: 38,878
Reading Level: 4.6
Interest Level: 4-7
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 4.6 / points: 6.0 / quiz: 155743 / grade: Middle Grades
Reading Counts!: reading level:3.8 / points:10.0 / quiz:Q61613
Lexile: 660L
Guided Reading Level: Q
Fountas & Pinnell: Q

Chapter 1

Mama, why do we have to live in a cage?” Flora dug in the dirt at something hard and rusty. “Honey, don’t do that.” Her mother nosed heraway. “And it’s not a cage. It’s a pigpen.” “Same thing,” said Flora under her breath.
   How unlucky she was—born with adventurous hooves that were stuck inside a pen. But she wasn’t giving up. If there was a way out, Flora said to her- self, she would find it.
   She had already packed down trails to each corner of the pen. She had poked her wet snout through every wooden slat to smell the other side. And she had dug holes all along the pen’s perimeter. Usually the only thing hiding under the surface was more dirt—until today. Maybe this hard and rusty something would bring a change in routine.
   As soon as her mother turned, Flora went back to digging. She scratched away busily until the thing popped out of the ground.
   “I knew it.” Flora gave a little squeal of joy. Now she had to see what it could do.
   “Flora!” shouted her mother. Flora took a step back.
   Her mother trotted over, and close on her heels were three brothers. Flora had seven, so there was always at least one around to watch her get into trouble.
   “Rusty pieces of metal are very dangerous. Why do you insist on unearthing things better left alone?” said her mother.
   Flora stamped the ground. “If it’s unexplored then it needs to get dug up.”
   “I see,” said Mother. “Well if it is sharp and rusty, then it needs to stay unexplored and underground.” Her mother used her snout to nudge and scoot the nail over to the wooden fence, where there was a space between the ground and the lowest board.
   “Mama, wait! I’m not done with that thingy yet.” Flora shoved herself between her mother’s legs.
   Her mother pushed her back. “You most certainly are done with this thingy, little one.” With a firm kick, she spun the nail under the board and out of sight.
   Flora screwed up her face, not sure if she should stomp or flop on the ground. But before she could choose, her mother lay down with her back against the fence. “Breakfast time!” she called.
   A thrill ran through Flora. She was hungry. So were her brothers.
   Flora dove for a good spot, only to find herself bumped and turned aside.
   “There’s enough for everyone,” Mother said. Nobody  listened.
   But Flora, the firstborn of the litter, had sturdy shoulders and strong back legs. When she failed to
push through, she had other ways to make room for herself. Standing on a brother’s ear usually created an opening. And if that didn’t work, she’d use her sharp teeth. Flora found that if she chomped down on a brother’s tail, she could count on a loud squeal and an open space.
   A girl had to fight for her food in this family—except against little Alfred, the runt. If he started sniffling, Flora made room for two.
   After breakfast was naptime. Little pigs with their tummies round and full of milk flopped against one another on the ground. But Flora thought piglets spent too much of their lives sleeping. Today she pawed her brother’s knee. “Sam, wake up.”
   “Ummm,” Sam grunted. He didn’t move.
   Flora went over to Tommy. His ear was flopped open.
   “Boo.” Tommy’s head snapped up. “Naptime’s over,” she said.
   “Go away.” Tommy laid his head back down and folded his ear closed.
Flora returned to Sam. She thought about standing on his tail.
   Just behind her someone else grunted. When Flora turned, she saw Alfred smiling and twitching in his sleep.
   “Alfred!” She walked over to her littlest brother, who opened his eyes. “It’s time to go exploring.”
   “Flora, I have a full tummy, and that always makes me sleepy. Besides, we explored the whole pen yesterday, and there wasn’t one new, excit- ing thing.”
   “What about that nail I just dug up?”
   Alfred closed his eyes. “New, but not exciting.” “Fine.” Flora turned her back. She had to admit he was right. But if anything exciting ever did pop up, she’d be the first to see it, if she kept exploring.
   She trotted over to the manure pile, Flora’s favorite lookout. It was the highest point in the pig- pen and the only place Flora could hope to see anything interesting beyond her small world. She gazed past the shade of the pigpen roof to where the world was bright and sunny—sunny junk heap, sunny grass, sunny cornfield, sunny gravel road. A familiar sound floated in. Flora cocked her head to one side to listen. Dogs. They were barking again.
   Now, seeing a dog would be exciting! What would it look like? she wondered. Woolly like a sheep? Horned like a bull? Single-hoofed like a horse or double-hoofed like a pig? One thing was sure, dogs made more noise than all of the other animals put together.
   As the barking died down, Flora tilted her head up at the pigpen roof. Sunlight poured through lit- tle holes, showing bits of dust in the air. Flora moved so that one point of light landed on her front leg. This was as much direct sun as Flora ever got. She lay down carefully so that the spot of light stayed on her leg, and she watched it.
   It looked like a little star. Mother had told her about the points of light that came out at night, like a hundred eyes, watching and twinkling high above the world. Flora wished she could see those eyes. 

When the spot of light moved off her leg, she scrambled up and this time looked all around.Behind her was an empty pigpen. To her right was the open side of the barn. Flora could see through it to the three horse stalls on the far wall. Only one had housed a horse for the last three days. Nessie was quiet except when her hooves knocked against the wooden walls.
   Flora turned back to the sunshine and the junk heap.
   There were old tires, machine parts, wavy rafts of chicken wire, and broken tools that lay where they had been tossed. In the middle was a wheelbarrow with no wheel, and in its body was a green garden hose coiled around . . .
   A white fur ball?

Flora looked again. Was that a dog? The fur ball stretched and yawned. It had a black ear and a mouth full of sharp teeth. Flora’s front knees trembled. This was new and exciting!
   The  creature  stepped  down  from  the  wheel
barrow and walked carelessly toward the pigpen. Should Flora warn her mother? No. She could handle the intruder.
   She crept off the manure pile and pushed herself close to the fence where the fur ball might enter, if it was foolish enough to step inside a pigpen guarded by a fierce, sharp-hoofed piglet. She hadn’t woken up today expecting a fight, but this was going to be very satisfying. If some prowling food thief thought it could sneak into her home, Flora was just the pig to teach it a lesson. She crouched.
   Sure enough, the fur ball slipped like water through the slats in the fence.
   This was it, the moment Flora would leap and . . .
   The fur ball sat down and began to lick itself. Flora managed to stop from pouncing to watch.
   Its little pink tongue went in and out of its toothy mouth, licking the fur in front and then working from one side to the other.   


Excerpted from The Adventures of a South Pole Pig: A Novel of Snow and Courage by Chris Kurtz
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

“Move over Wilbur and Babe, there’s a new pig in town.” —School Library Journal (starred review)

Flora’s a die-hard dreamer. She’s never left the farm, but she knows she was born for adventure. She’s determined to become a sled pig!

A harrowing voyage to Antarctica, a bacon-loving cook, and a shipwreck in deadly conditions stand between Flora and her dream. What will happen to Flora, whose companions see her as more of a meal than an adventurer?

As the ship’s captain says, you never know where brains and talent will come from. They just may come from this brave pig.


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