The Hoboken Chicken Emergency

by Daniel Pinkwater

The Hoboken Chicken Emergency (1)

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Arthur goes to pick up the turkey for Thanksgiving dinner but comes back with a 260-pound chicken.

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11 reviews
Chickens, as everyone knows, "are very sensitive birds... When their feelings are hurt, they become unpleasant, anti-social. A perfectly sweet chicken can become a bitter destructive bird, if it feels that it is unwanted..."

And so it is with Henrietta, the 266 pound chicken young Arthur Bobowicz brings home one Thanksgiving. When Arthur's father insists that the massive bird must go, Henrietta ends up frightened and homeless, lashing out angrily at the world around her. It's the "Hoboken Chicken Emergency," and as mass hysteria grips the city, the authorities seem helpless to stop the fowl depredations. Will Henrietta be caught by Anthony De Palma, the Chicken Hunter? Will Arthur and his beloved bird finally be reunited...?

It's another show more hilarious Pinkwater adventure, complete with all the wonderfully improbable circumstances, quirky characters, and sly dialogue I've come to expect from this author. Originally published in the 1970s, my copy of The Hoboken Chicken Emergency came from the library, and includes Pinkwater's own simple illustrations. I understand that this title was recently republished, with an "updated" text, and different illustrations. Frankly, I'm not certain that any changes were necessary. Although anyone with a sense of humor will be able to appreciate it, this book's off-beat hilarity and action-oriented story make it an ideal choice for reluctant young boy readers. show less
“Nobody in Arthur Bobowicz’s family really liked turkey.” But Arthur’s father insists on it for Thanksgiving dinner. “Poppa came from Poland, and he was very big on holidays, and being an American … Most of the kids in the neighborhood had the same scene at home. … They all had fathers like Arthur Bobowicz’s father—they came from Italy, and the Ukraine, and Puerto Rico, and Hong Kong. The kids were all being raised to be Americans, and everyone’s father knew that Americans eat turkey on Thanksgiving.”

But when Arthur goes to pick up the bird at the butcher he discovered the family’s order has been lost. There is no turkey waiting for Bobowicz, and every other turkey has already been spoken for, as have the show more chickens, ducks and geese. Arthur searches the neighborhood in vain, hoping to find a fowl of some kind to bring home. Just when he’s about to give up he sees this sign in an apartment house window, “Professor Mazzocchi Inventor of the Chicken System.” So Arthur returns home with a live chicken on a leash, an experimental 266 pound chicken twice as tall as he is. The Bobowiczs have meatloaf for Thanksgiving, and Arthur has a new pet that really frightens the neighbors. show less
I've been a fan of Pinkwater for years but somehow never read this before. For shame, as it's one of his most iconic. Funny, touching, funny, clever, especially good for those infamous young boy reluctant readers, oh, and funny. Ok, fine, maybe a little quieter than some of the author's other works. Not as short as the [b:Irving and Muktuk: Two Bad Bears|893753|Irving and Muktuk Two Bad Bears|Daniel Manus Pinkwater|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1223426154s/893753.jpg|1739570] stories but still a very quick read.
children's fiction. I've heard this characterized as middle grade, but I would say 3rd-5th (maybe hi-lo for 6th). The movie they made from it was so memorable I found that I couldn't concentrate or appreciate the text as much; I kept trying to remember what happened in the movie. But I think it would make a fine read-aloud or even a read-alone.
Daniel Pinkwater truly is an exceptional author. I can't believe it's taken me as long as it has to read it, and even now, I don't think I would have gone from to cover to cover this quickly if it weren't for Pinkwater reading like a man on the run. He's truly wonderful, not two ways about it. He makes everyday sequences into true wonders.
A young boy named Arthur goes out to get a turkey for Thanksgiving dinner. Unfortunately, there is not a turkey left in town. Arthur goes to every store until he stumbles upon a sign about chickens. He ends up with a two hundred sixty-six pound chicken. He decides to keep it as a pet. The chicken gets loose and scares everyone in town. Finally, the town's people treat the chicken nice and it returns home to Arthur.

The story started out with my attention, but after the second chapter, lost it. To me it seemed that my nine year old daughter could write a story on the same level as this. I checked this book out from a school library and the sheet that gets stamped with the return date has never been used up since 2003. It came across to me show more as kind of a modern day remake of Frankenstien, but with a chicken instead.

A teacher could read this story and have the students discuss what would make this story a modern fantasy. They could also comppare this story to other fantasy stories. The students could also write a story about their own version of a giant pet.
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Read with Zack. Very funny. good for those just starting to read fiction on their own. Chicken becomes large, can't stay with boys, terrorizes city.

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131+ Works 11,533 Members
Author, illustrator, and radio commentator Daniel M. Pinkwater was born in Memphis Tennessee on November 15, 1941. He is trained as an artist and attended Bard College. In 1969, he wrote and illustrated his first book, The Terrible Roar. Since then he has written over 50 books for children, young adults, and adults. He is also a commentator on show more National Public Radio's All Things Considered and regularly reviews children's books on Weekend Edition Saturday. While he has illustrated many of his works, his most recent ones have been illustrated by his wife Jill Pinkwater. (Bowker Author Biography) Daniel Pinkwater is regarded by critics, educators, psychologists, and law enforcement agencies as the world's most influential writer of books for children and young adults. Since 1987, he has been a regular commentator on NPR's All Things Considered and two collections of his essays have been brought out to the delight of listeners who can read. He lives in Hyde Park, New York. (Publisher Provided) show less

Some Editions

Auth, Tony (Illustrator)
Pinkwater, Jill (Illustrator)

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Series

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Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1977
People/Characters
Arthur Bobowicz; Henrietta
Important places
Hoboken, New Jersey, USA; New Jersey, USA
First words
Nobody in Arthur Bobowicz's family really liked turkey.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Then, he and Henrietta went out to look for a secluded spot, where Henrietta could practice on Arthur's new Christmas roller-skates.

Classifications

Genres
Children's Books, Fiction and Literature, Kids
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PZ7 .P6335 .HLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
686
Popularity
41,420
Reviews
11
Rating
(3.93)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
24
UPCs
2
ASINs
7