Hot Fudge (Bunnicula and Friends, #2)

by James Howe

Paperback, 1991

Status

Available

Local notes

R How

Barcode

2694

Publication

Camelot (1991), 32 pages

Description

The Monroe family animals suspect that Bunnicula is up to his old tricks when a pan of fudge turns white.

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

32 p.; 7.5 x 0.25 inches

User reviews

LibraryThing member princessofthesea
Subject Area: Language Arts
Genre: Fantasy
Critique/Summary:
Because this book involves talking pets, it falls into the genre of fantasy. This story is an excellent example of a mystery. The students will enjoy following the plot and predicting the resolution. The author does a great job of
Show More
incorporating seemingly impossible events and then disproving them in the end.
(Stars for plot)
Age: Primary
Show Less
LibraryThing member michelleraphael
A story about three pets that try to guard the house from a thief in the area...and also attempt to not eat the fudge in the kitchen. A nice tail of man and dog.
LibraryThing member wichitafriendsschool
The Monroe family tests Harold the dog's willpower when they leave him alone with a pan of fudge.
LibraryThing member MeganSchneider
Far from my favorite of Jame's Howe and it was for one reason, and most likely a silly one. I can see why children would like it but I did not like the fact that the dog Harold was obsessed with chocolate and that the boy fed it to him constantly, as we all know this is pretty much poison for dogs.
Show More
I feel like kids could potentially take this story to heart (especially those who struggle with idioms and sarcasm) and end up hurting their animals. Now, aside from that a really cute story about the fellow pets on his famous Bunnicula and losing a pan of fudge only to realize the boy who stole it was none other than their owner. Cute but not for me.
Show Less

Pages

32

Rating

½ (10 ratings; 3.6)
Page: 0.5289 seconds