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Hank the Cowdog and his sidekick Drover find themselves confronting a huge storm in the middle of the night.Tags
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The Case of the Swirling Killer Tornado starts out with a funny conversation between half-asleep Hank and Drover. (Those dogs must truly love pork chops because 'pork chop' is frequently included when they talk in their sleep or are half alseep in these books.)
Little Alfred (pronounced 'Alferd') lets the dogs into the house during a thunderstorm. All three are terrified when they think that Little Alfred's mother, Sally May, is going to find out. Loved the sound effects when she comes toward the kitchen. High Loper himself has a good line when he unknowingly sniffs those wet dogs in the dark.
There is indeed a tornado headed for the Loper ranch. The Lopers head for the storm cellar. I guess Little Alfred was too afraid to tell his show more parents that they were trapping the dogs in the house.
Hank and Drover escape, only to have an adventure with the tornado. So do those two buzzards, Wallace and Junior. (I wonder why I never realized that Wallace and Hank have the same oversized egos and not-always-correct use of big words before. No wonder they don't like each other.) Loved Wallace's lines about why they should be calling it a cyclone instead of a tornado and his pride about being a grouch.
The dogs' escape from their peril will probably be handed down in the Loper family for generations to come. It might even spread throughout Ochiltree County, if not all of Texas.
Drover contributes a song he wrote, 'Never Bark at a Funnel-Shaped Cloud'. My opinion of it isn't as low as Hank's, but Hank does come up with better songs.
Speaking of singing, three songs are sung as rounds in this book: 'Row, Row, Row Your Boat;' 'Three Blind Mice,' and a song I'd never heard before: 'Why Doesn't My Goose [sing as well as thy goose when I paid for my goose twice as much as thy goose]'.
Go on and git yerself some fine family entertainment and pick up the audio edition of The Case of the Swirling Killer Tornado. show less
Little Alfred (pronounced 'Alferd') lets the dogs into the house during a thunderstorm. All three are terrified when they think that Little Alfred's mother, Sally May, is going to find out. Loved the sound effects when she comes toward the kitchen. High Loper himself has a good line when he unknowingly sniffs those wet dogs in the dark.
There is indeed a tornado headed for the Loper ranch. The Lopers head for the storm cellar. I guess Little Alfred was too afraid to tell his show more parents that they were trapping the dogs in the house.
Hank and Drover escape, only to have an adventure with the tornado. So do those two buzzards, Wallace and Junior. (I wonder why I never realized that Wallace and Hank have the same oversized egos and not-always-correct use of big words before. No wonder they don't like each other.) Loved Wallace's lines about why they should be calling it a cyclone instead of a tornado and his pride about being a grouch.
The dogs' escape from their peril will probably be handed down in the Loper family for generations to come. It might even spread throughout Ochiltree County, if not all of Texas.
Drover contributes a song he wrote, 'Never Bark at a Funnel-Shaped Cloud'. My opinion of it isn't as low as Hank's, but Hank does come up with better songs.
Speaking of singing, three songs are sung as rounds in this book: 'Row, Row, Row Your Boat;' 'Three Blind Mice,' and a song I'd never heard before: 'Why Doesn't My Goose [sing as well as thy goose when I paid for my goose twice as much as thy goose]'.
Go on and git yerself some fine family entertainment and pick up the audio edition of The Case of the Swirling Killer Tornado. show less
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168 Works 16,464 Members
John Richard Erickson was born in Midland, Texas on October 20, 1943. In 1966, he received a B.A. degree from the University of Texas in Austin and studied for two years at Harvard Divinity School. He began to publish short stories while working full-time as a cowboy, farmhand, and ranch manager. In 1982, he started his own publishing company show more called Maverick Books, which published the first Hank the Cowdog book in 1983. He is the author of the best-selling Hank the Cowdog series, which won an Audie for Outstanding Children's Series from the Audio Publisher's Association in 1993. His stories have also won Oppenheimer, Wrangler, and Lamplighter Awards. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Case of the Swirling Killer Tornado
- People/Characters
- Hank the Cowdog (Head of Ranch Security); Drover (dog, Hank's little assistant); High Loper (ranch owner); Sally May Loper (High's wife); Little Alfred Loper (Sally May and High's son); Molly Loper (Alfred's little sister) (show all 10); Slim Chance (a cowboy who works for the Lopers); Wallace (a buzzard); Junior (a buzzard, Wallace's son); a milk cow
- Important places
- Lopers' Ranch, Ochiltree County, Texas, USA
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- Members
- 230
- Popularity
- 141,898
- Reviews
- 1
- Rating
- (4.13)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 18
- ASINs
- 2




























































