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Loading... The Boy Who Was Followed Homeby Margaret Mahy
None. A boy gets followed home by an unsuspected animal, a Hippo. The boy was fine with it because hippos were his favorite, until more and more hippos followed him home. His father eventually got a magic pill to stop the hippos from following, but it attracted a different animal instead. This story is about a little boy who is followed home by elephants and everyday, more elephants join. He takes a magic pill to get rid of them, but then at the end of the story, giraffes began to follow him home from school. For grades k-2. Great for a fantasy lesson. Illustartions drawn with water colors. Robert was followed home by a hippo. This book is a fantasy picture book that is fictional. The art is hand drawn illustrations done with colored pencils. The book is about a little boy who is followed home by hippos every day. The first day it was just one, and then every day more and more start following him. The reading level is first or second grade. The curricular connection is it is fun reading. no reviews | add a review
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The story is wonderfully amusing, in that matter-of-factly surreal way that I have come to appreciate in picture-books of a certain stamp. Think Mac Barnett's Billy Twitters and His Blue Whale Problem, or David Small's Imogene's Antlers, in which the young protagonists confront some unusual circumstances (caring for a pet blue whale, and growing antlers, respectively). In The Boy Who Was Followed Home, young Robert finds that he has an ever-growing train of hippopotami following him home from school, and while he himself is pleased - he'd always liked these lumbering creatures, and "was delighted to think that he was the sort of boy that hippopotami would follow" - his parents are less than thrilled at their presence in the back yard. Naturally, when a boy is being followed by a hippopotamine crowd, the solution is to call in a witch, and so Robert's father hires Mrs. Cathy Squinge. Unfortunately (or fortunately, as the case may be), he doesn't listen to her warning about the side-effects of the pill she prescribes...
I loved this book! The story just tickled my funny bone, and the ending - which put me strongly in mind of the similar conclusion in Imogene's Antlers (mentioned above), was just delightful! Steven Kellogg's artwork, which didn't impress me terribly, based on my perusal of the cover, ended up working very well with the narrative. All in all, a fabulous addition to any young reader's picture-book shelf. If this is trouble, then I want more of it! (