Horn Book
Reissued again in board book form, this miniature version of the Woods' offbeat picture book features the same ten little pigs cavorting on a child's fingers. The text is brief enough for the small format; some of the details of the piggy fun are harder to see, as each pig is now only about one inch tall.
Kirkus Reviews
(Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
I've got two/fat little piggies''—thumb-sized porkers perched, on opposing pages, on the thumbs of a pair of chubby hands,
two smart/little piggies''—the index fingers are now extended and two more tiny pigs are added, one orating and one with his nose in a book. The long little piggies on the middle fingers are a basketball player and a ballerina; the ring fingers get silly'' piggies, the little ones,
wee'' babies—and, meanwhile, the other pigs continue to cavort. Once the whole crew is established, new circumstances are explored: it's hot or cold, clean or delightfully dirty. Each pig has a character and exploits to follow; the two hands, in the meantime, do childlike things but never meet until the last bedtime page—where fingers and pigs kiss goodnight. Not since King Bidgood's in the Bathtub (1986, Caldecott Honor) has this talented duo produced such a delightfully ebullient extravaganza. These exuberant, plumb little pigs are real charmers. (Picture book. 3-7)"
School Library Journal
PreS-K-- In an imaginative play on the fingers-and-toes game, a child's hands introduce two fat, two smart, two tall, two silly, and two wee piggies who cavort on fingertips. Personalities are established early, and children will have fun following a smart reading piggy and a fat eating piggy throughout the book. Belongings such as a teddy bear, balloon, and umbrella can be spotted from page to page, sometimes in out-of-the-way places. Large pages are a perfect backdrop for the antics, which are organized in a series of simple-phrase, double-spread contrasts of hot/cold, clean/dirty, and good--until bedtime when the naughty ones whisk down the tummy, dance on toes, then hide. Time to put them together for fat, smart, tall, silly, and wee goodnight kisses. But one smart piggy is still reading--by flashlight! All of this mischief is done up in oil and begins against a background of warm cream. Then bathing-suited piggies sizzle on bright yellow, snowball against cold blue, bubble up on squeaky-clean pink, squish in mud, behave their best on sky blue, then do their bedtime romp on darkening pages until the final kissing piggies are edged in moonglow. Brilliant colors and large pictures convey the humor to groups, while more subtle details of costume and trappings invite viewers to pore over the antics again and again. ``This little piggy . . . '' will never be the same. --Jane Saliers, Atlanta-Fulton Public Library