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English
Red Fox
04 October 1996
When the children bring Courtney home he's just a loveable scruffy old dog. But the-mongrel-that-nobody-wants has the most amazing talents. He can cook! He can juggle! He can even play the violin! Then one day Courtney the wonder dog packs up his trunk and leaves home - but the children find out his helping paw is not far away. . .
By:  
Illustrated by:   John Burningham
Imprint:   Red Fox
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Height: 296mm,  Width: 255mm,  Spine: 4mm
Weight:   236g
ISBN:   9780099666813
ISBN 10:   0099666812
Pages:   32
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 3 To 6
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  5-7 years ,  English as a second language
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

John Burningham was born in 1936. He studied illustration at the Central School of Art. His first children's book, Borka, was published in 1963, and it was awarded the Kate Greenaway Medal as the best illustrated book of the year. John Burningham collaborated with Ian Fleming on Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang, designing the model of the famous car. He lived in London with his wife Helen Oxenbury, also a well-known author and illustrator. John Burningham died on January 4th, 2019.

Reviews for Courtney

One of Britain's most thoughtful and creative picture-book makers gives a familiar scenario his own inimitable spin. When the children beg for a dog, the usual debate ensues. Permission finally granted, the boy and girl ignore their parents' admonition ( Make sure it's a proper dog. One with a pedigree ) and request a dog that nobody wants. The parents are horrified when they bring home a mongrel, but Courtney turns out to be a paragon who cooks delicious meals, plays the violin, cleans the house, and rescues the baby when a fire breaks out. Still, when he disappears, the parents observe that, If they are not thoroughbreds, you cannot rely on them. In a final sequence the kids are saved from drifting out to sea by a hero identified only in the background of an illustration as their erstwhile dog. Appropriate to the gently ironic tone and carefully understated subtext, Burningham's pictures here are in his familiar cartoon mode, poignantly expressive but without the marvelously vibrant alternating spreads he has often used to express a child's imagination or emotions (e.g., in John Patrick Norman McHennessy... [1988]). Witty, well told, and superbly illustrated. (Kirkus Reviews)


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