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==Plot==
==Plot==
This story starts with a wolf named Alexander T. introducing himself. He plans to make a cake for his grandmother but fails due to his sneezing. (He also ran out of sugar and didn't have enough money to buy more.) He then tries to ask one of his neighbors for a cup of sugar, [[The Three Little Pigs|a pig]] (which is the first little pig), whom he accidentally killed due to his sneezing knocking down his house. The wolf then eats the pig, then he tries to ask the second pig whom he accidentally kills too. He then asks the final pig (who had a whole sack full of sugar). He talks impolite about his grandmother. Alexander then goes insane. Policemen pigs heard about the news and accused Alexander of causing havoc. Then Alexander is taken captive and is sentenced to ten thousand years in pig prison. (That is, for the destruction of the pigs's houses and the attempted sugar robbery.) At the end, it is suggested that maybe the reader would loan him a cup of sugar.
This story starts with a wolf named Alexander T. introducing himself. He plans to make a cake for his grandmother but fails due to his sneezing. (He also ran out of sugar and didn't have enough money to buy more.) He then tries to ask one of his neighbors for a cup of sugar, [[The Three Little Pigs|a pig]] (which is the first little pig), whom he accidentally killed due to his sneezing knocking down his house. (The first pig --who was in the straw house-- was not in, while the second pig --who was in the stick house-- was "shaving the hairs on his chinny chin-chin".) The wolf then eats the pig, then he tries to ask the second pig whom he accidentally kills too. He then asks the final pig (who had a whole sack full of sugar). The third pig talks impolite about his grandmother. Alexander then goes insane. Policemen pigs heard about the news and accused Alexander of causing havoc. Then Alexander is taken captive and is sentenced to ten thousand years in pig prison. (That is, for the destruction of the pigs's houses and the attempted sugar robbery.) At the end, it is suggested that maybe the reader would loan him a cup of sugar.


==Critical reception==
==Critical reception==

Revision as of 16:07, 20 January 2023

The True Story of the 3 Little Pigs!
AuthorJon Scieszka
Cover artistLane Smith
SpracheEnglisch
GenreChildren's book
PublisherViking Children's Books
Publication date
1989
Publication placeVereinigte Staaten
Pages32
ISBN0-14-054056-3
OCLC43158890

The True Story of the 3 Little Pigs! is a children's book by Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith. Released in a number of editions since its first release by Viking Kestrel, an imprint of Viking Penguin in 1989, it is a parody of The Three Little Pigs as told by the Big Bad Wolf, known in the book as "A. Wolf," short for "Alexander T. Wolf." The book was honored by the American Library Association as an ALA Notable Book.[1]

Plot

This story starts with a wolf named Alexander T. introducing himself. He plans to make a cake for his grandmother but fails due to his sneezing. (He also ran out of sugar and didn't have enough money to buy more.) He then tries to ask one of his neighbors for a cup of sugar, a pig (which is the first little pig), whom he accidentally killed due to his sneezing knocking down his house. (The first pig --who was in the straw house-- was not in, while the second pig --who was in the stick house-- was "shaving the hairs on his chinny chin-chin".) The wolf then eats the pig, then he tries to ask the second pig whom he accidentally kills too. He then asks the final pig (who had a whole sack full of sugar). The third pig talks impolite about his grandmother. Alexander then goes insane. Policemen pigs heard about the news and accused Alexander of causing havoc. Then Alexander is taken captive and is sentenced to ten thousand years in pig prison. (That is, for the destruction of the pigs's houses and the attempted sugar robbery.) At the end, it is suggested that maybe the reader would loan him a cup of sugar.

Critical reception

Based on a 2007 online poll, the National Education Association listed the book as one of its "Teachers' Top 100 Books for Children."[2] It was one of the "Top 100 Picture Books" of all time in a 2012 poll by School Library Journal.[3]

Adaptation

This book was later adapted into a Weston Woods Studios animated short in 2008 with Paul Giamatti as the wolf.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Molly Dunham Glassman. "Writing team creates comedy for children," Baltimore Sun, reprinted in Cedar Rapids Gazette, October 18, 1992, page 2F.
  2. ^ National Education Association (2007). "Teachers' Top 100 Books for Children". Retrieved August 22, 2012.
  3. ^ Bird, Elizabeth (July 6, 2012). "Top 100 Picture Books Poll Results". School Library Journal "A Fuse #8 Production" blog. Retrieved August 22, 2012.