Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
A pig becomes a superhero.Porcine Gary has a great life reading comics about the Crimson Swine, playing video games, and hanging with his friends, Brooklyn, a bat, and Carl, a fish. When a prank goes awry and he receives a radioactive bite from Brooklyn, Gary discovers he now has superhero powers and develops his new alter ego, Batpig. He tells Brooklyn about this development but not Carl, who can be indiscreet-and immediately picks up that his friends are hiding something from him. Carl's hurt feelings understandably morph into anger; Gary's decision to exclude his friend accidentally ends up creating a supervillain who may be Batpig's undoing unless the trio can work together. A second episode sees the friends face off against a nefarious human foe, the Butcher, a White woman who wants to use the power of the world's meat and has a robot that makes pigs in blankets. The first in a series, Harrell's full-color graphic-novel charmer is over-the-top fun, filled with fast pacing, abundant silliness (pig puns abound!), and a well-developed plot and characters, that nevertheless does not rely on humor as its sole support. Gary and his friends are both relatable and accessible: The social tribulations of being part of a trio of friends will resonate with middle-grade audiences. This is an absolute must-read for fans of Dav Pilkey's Dog Man series.Readers will go hog wild for this lovable hero. (Graphic fiction. 7-12)
Kirkus Reviews
(Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
A pig becomes a superhero.Porcine Gary has a great life reading comics about the Crimson Swine, playing video games, and hanging with his friends, Brooklyn, a bat, and Carl, a fish. When a prank goes awry and he receives a radioactive bite from Brooklyn, Gary discovers he now has superhero powers and develops his new alter ego, Batpig. He tells Brooklyn about this development but not Carl, who can be indiscreet-and immediately picks up that his friends are hiding something from him. Carl's hurt feelings understandably morph into anger; Gary's decision to exclude his friend accidentally ends up creating a supervillain who may be Batpig's undoing unless the trio can work together. A second episode sees the friends face off against a nefarious human foe, the Butcher, a White woman who wants to use the power of the world's meat and has a robot that makes pigs in blankets. The first in a series, Harrell's full-color graphic-novel charmer is over-the-top fun, filled with fast pacing, abundant silliness (pig puns abound!), and a well-developed plot and characters, that nevertheless does not rely on humor as its sole support. Gary and his friends are both relatable and accessible: The social tribulations of being part of a trio of friends will resonate with middle-grade audiences. This is an absolute must-read for fans of Dav Pilkey's Dog Man series.Readers will go hog wild for this lovable hero. (Graphic fiction. 7-12)