The House on East 88th Street (Lyle the Crocodile)

by Bernard Waber

Paperback, 1962

Status

Available

Call number

J2M.1961

Publication

Houghton Mifflin Company

Pages

48

Description

A family moving into a new house discovers in their bathtub a talented crocodile named Lyle, who soon becomes an important part of the family.

Collection

Barcode

402

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1962

Physical description

48 p.; 9 inches

ISBN

0395199700 / 9780395199701

UPC

046442199704

Lexile

L

User reviews

LibraryThing member ehayne1
I loved this book because it has a cute story and great morals. Also, the illustrations catch your eye. There are not many colors, and sometimes the pictures are not even fully colored. The pictures are crudely drawn, almost as though a child drew them, but the emotions on the faces of the Primm
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family and also of Lyle bring the reader to feel the same emotions, whether they be scared at finding a crocodile, sadness at Lyle leaving, or happiness when Lyle returns. This book also teaches great morals through the main idea. I think the main idea is that a person should never put fame above the needs or wants of others. This is what Signor Valenti did, but he realized that by taking Lyle away from the Primms, Signor Valenti was taking away Lyle's happiness. Also, at the beginning of the book, there is a great message about not judging someone, or an animal, by how they look. If the Primm's had continued to judge Lyle for being a crocodile, they would not have gotten to enjoy him as a friend.
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LibraryThing member blbooks
First sentence: This is the house. The house on East 88th Street. It is empty now, but it won't be for long. Strange sounds come from the house. Can you hear them? Listen: Swish, swash, splash, swoosh...

Premise/plot: The Primm family is moving into the house on East 88th Street. [Mr. and Mrs. Primm
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and their son, Joshua]. What should they discover in their house???? Lyle, Lyle crocodile! Though the family is at first a bit shocked and confused, it's soon the new normal. OF COURSE the crocodile belongs there! Of course, he's just going to fit right in--not only with them as a family, but with the whole neighborhood, the city.

This is the origin story of Lyle, Lyle Crocodile. We meet Hector P. Valenti who seems to come and go in Lyle's life. In this first story, after making great friends with the Primm family, he is rushed away by Valenti...but the life of fame is not agreeable....not really.

My thoughts: I recently watched the film Lyle, Lyle Crocodile. I had not--to my recollection--read any of the Lyle books growing up. [Though it's entirely possible that I had them read to me at a young age--from the library--and have just forgotten.] I would say the movie blends the plot of House on East 88th Street and Lyle, Lyle Crocodile. It also connects the dots and fills in the blank. The picture books do not necessarily start at the beginning of Lyle's story. It begins with the Primm family moving in. The movie is all Lyle's story.

I enjoyed this one very much. I especially loved the art.
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Rating

½ (49 ratings; 4)

Call number

J2M.1961
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