Madlenka's Dog

by Peter Sís

Madlenka

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As Madlenka walks her imaginary dog around her city block, her neighbors see in her pet the image of the dogs they had as a children.

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8 reviews
After initially reading Madlenka’s Dog, I had very mixed feelings about it. The first time I read through it, the overall message was unclear and the plot was confusing. After reading through it a couple times, I grew to really enjoy the artwork and the progression of the plot. The author’s writing style was simplistic, which makes it an easy read for younger readers. The whole premise of the book is based upon the fact that Madlenka really wants to own a dog but her parents refuse, so she decides to make use of her imagination. She leaves her house with her imaginary dog and walks it around her neighborhood, introducing it to many different people. Each person she encountered had different interpretations of her dog based upon show more their own ideal pup. This was done in a unique way, with interactive flaps which were displayed on each person she spoke to that the reader had to open. For instance, she met a French baker named Mr. Gaston who was illustrated holding a baking sheet full of croissants. Madlenka said “Hello, Mr. Gaston. I have a new dog!” and he responded “Bonjour, Madeleine. I once had a dog. Hello, dog.” The reader now had to lift the flap to reveal Mr. Gaston’s interpretation of Madlenka’s dog.
The illustrations are colored in a way where it makes sense as you progress through the book to discover the overall message. Madlenka is displayed in full-color, while her surroundings are illustrated in minimal color with hues such as black, grey, and white. Throughout meeting all of the people on the city streets, when the reader lifts up the interactive flap of each person’s interpretation of the dog, it is displayed in full color to represent that person using their imagination. For example, at one point she meets a produce seller named Mr. Eduardo (illustrated in black and white) who claims that her dog is “big and woolly”, revealing a flap of a fully-colored bear-like dog.
During her walk, she meets a young girl named Cleopatra who has an imaginary horse. In the pages that follow, both Madlenka and Cleopatra play together in the courtyard with their pretend pets. The illustrations on these pages were in full color, with circle cutouts for both of their faces which makes it a perfect read for younger readers. As I reread this book, these pages reinforced the idea that the illustrator’s choice of when to use color could represent when a person uses their imagination. My favorite part of this book is when Madlenka is called back home and she is illustrated with all of the neighbors imaginary dogs following behind her, reinforcing the big idea that encourages readers to use and appreciate their imagination. I think this is an extremely important theme to expose to children, considering that we live in a generation where kids are handed iPhones and technology at such a young age that dulls their creative minds. It pushes readers to broaden their perspective on ways in which they can have fun, emphasizing the importance of using their imagination to do so. Overall, this is a really good read that I would recommend for all ages.
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The follow-up to what was one of my favourite pictures books of 2011 is a lot of fun. Madlenka's parents refuse her the dog she longs for, so she makes use of the powers of imagination and goes walking her make-believe dog around the block. Is it make-believe though? Each person Madlenka and her dog encounter shows her and the viewer the first dog they had as a child. Gorgeous illustrations of course, here there were flaps on every page that revealed the dogs, and a central part where Madlenka and her friend Cleopatra take a trip through time with their imaginary friends. Beautiful good fun.
Madlenka's Dog is a great book for children. Madlenka is an incredibly imaginative and inquisitive young girl who wants a dog, so she decides to make one up and walk around her New York City neighborhood, meeting neighbors along the way. Writer and illustrator Peter Sís based Madlenka on his own daughter. It's no wonder she's so loveable!

The illustrations in this book are intricate, detailed, and colorful. Sís even provides tiny maps at the top of the page so that readers can track Madlenka's walk as she meets her multiethnic neighbors who remember the dogs that they had as children. There are many different methods used to illustrate this book. Cross-hatch ink backgrounds represent the street, while Madlenka is colored in with bright show more colored pencils. Watercolors are used in aerial illustrations of Madlenka's block. The entire book is beautiful.

It's an especially great book for children because of the lift-up flaps and peek-through windows. These interactive elements help children connect with the book on another level. They also demonstrate the theme of the book, which is the power of imagination.
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½
This was a beautiful and imaginative tale about a young girl Madlenka who desperately wants to own a dog. She has a imaginary dog that she takes all over the city and by the time she returns home she has several neighborhood dogs following her and her imaginary dog. I loved this book because it recognizes the importance and power of one's imagination. I also loved this book because of its interactive nature as the pages had flaps to open. Children will be able to relate to this book for several reasons. Some children will be able to relate to living in an apartment and some will be able to relate to the strong desire of owning a dog.
Peter Sis's illustrations make this book one children will want to read again and again. As the little girl walks her invisible dog, there are flip tabs to show the reader all the different kinds of dogs the people Madlenka meets once had in their lives or wished they had. I love the part when she meets her friend who has an invisible horse, and they pretend they are having wonderful adventures with their pets. (these pages are in color with cut out holes for the children's faces). The structure of the book invites children to use their imagination.
½
Madlenka's Dog follows Madlenka on an afternoon adventure inside her imagination. She wishes to have a dog but does not have one. So instead she plays pretend. As she travels about her city she talks to many others who dream of their own imaginary dogs that she "collects" along the way. Overall this story encourages imagination in a student. When Madlenka and her friend Cleopatra meet up they hang out in the courtyard traveling to a fantasy land of unicorns and kings and queens, an Egyptian desert, and a winter wonder land untill they are called home. In this generations and years to come children are lacking a creative mind. Everything is made for them, vividly and life like to the point that they have to imagine nothing. This book show more encourages the simplicity and fun that an imagination can deliver for a child. show less
This is a terrific book for a boy or girl 12 months and up. Some of the pages have flip-up panels and cutouts. The illustrations are charming and imaginative.
Madlenka lives in an urban neighborhood (maybe in Queens?). She really wants a dog. Go on a great adventure with Madlenka and the dog that she gets.

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33+ Works 9,028 Members
Peter Sis was born in Brno, Czechoslovakia, in 1949 and attended the Academy of Applied Arts in Prague and the Royal College of Art in London. He began his career as a filmmaker and won the Golden Bear Award at the 1980 West Berlin Film Festival for an animated short. He has also won the Grand Prix Toronto and the Cine Golden Eagle Award, and in show more 1983 collaborated with Bob Dylan on You Got to Serve Somebody. His film work is in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York. In 1982 Sis was sent to Los Angeles to produce a film for the 1984 Winter Olympics. But the film project was canceled when Czechoslovakia and the entire Eastern bloc decided to boycott the Olympics. Ordered by his government to return home, Sis decided to stay in the United States and was granted asylum. Sis then met Maurice Sendak who introduced him to children's books, and he moved to New York City in 1984 to begin a career in children's literature. Sís earned quick acclaim with the publication of the 1986 Newbery Medal Winner, The Whipping Boy by Sid Fleishman, for which he did the illustrations. Sis is a five-time winner of The New York Times Book Review Best Illustrated Book of the Year.. Komodo! and A Small Tall Tale from the Far Far North were each named a Boston Globe-Horn Book Award Honor Book, and he has won a Society of Illustrators Gold Medal for Komodo! and a Silver Medal for The Three Golden Keys. Starry Messenger: Galileo Galilei was a 1997 Caldecott Honor Book, as was Tibet Through the Red Box. Sis has also received a MacArthur Fellowship Sis' editorial illustrations have appeared in Time, Newsweek, Esquire, The Atlantic Monthly, and many other magazines in the United States and abroad. He has published nearly 1,000 drawings in The New York Times Book Review. He has designed many book jackets and posters, including, in 1984, the famous poster for Milos Forman's Academy Award-winning motion picture Amadeus. He has also completed a mural for the Washington/Baltimore Airport, a poster for the New York City subway system, and a stage set for the Joffrey Ballet. His work has been exhibited in Prague, London, Zurich, Hamburg, Los Angeles, and New York in both group and one-man shows. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Genres
Children's Books, Picture Books
DDC/MDS
426LanguageEnglish & Old English languages[Formerly: English Prosody]
LCC
PZ7 .S6219 .MLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
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Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
5
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1