| A Review of: Walter the Farting Dog: Trouble at the Yard Sale by Olga SteinYou probably have to be a guy. I feel guilty for saying this about
a book so wonderfully illustrated and so well put together, but I
simply don't like it. It isn't just that Walter is constantly
farting. It's crude, but dogs fart, and if you don't find that
funny, you can easily overlook this aspect of Walter. What bothers
me about this book is the story from the very start. Walter joins
father and little Betty and Billy at their yard sale table. The
family has all sorts of items for sale but no one is buying. No one
even approaches the table while Walter lies on the grass, contaminating
the air. Suddenly there's a customer, but what he wants isn't some
old dudad-he wants to purchase Walter. Father readily sells the dog
for ten dollars, and this is where I found myself put off. When the
children return, the father doesn't tell them he has sold the family
pet. He pretends Walter has wondered off on his own. The father
doesn't take into consideration his children's attachment to the
dog. Obviously what he cares most about is money. He may not be a
villain but he is vile.
But wait, there's a villain here too. The man who buys Walter is
actually a bank robber. He uses Walter's stinky gas to blow up
balloons which he pops at a bank, overwhelming the guards and
customers, and thereby getting away with a heap of money. Somewhere
in all of this is an animal rights message. The exploitation of
animals is cruel-just look at poor Walter, unable to move in a
contraption which keeps him immobile while gas is collected from
his back end.
Of course the ending is happy. Walter escapes, leads the police
back to the bankrobber, and is consequently hailed as a hero. Father
is only too happy to bask in the limelight as Walter's good deed
is celebrated at a special party given by the mayor. Fat, smelly
Walter is likeable, but he is too passive a character. Nothing moved
me in the story, nor did I find the plot engaging. Perhaps I simply
don't get the subversive brilliance of this book while all those
savvy customers, who continue to put this book on the Amazon.ca
bestsellers list, do.
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