Anna Fiske: Palle Puddel, et hundeliv
Denne boka har samme format og utstyr som Anna Fiske: "Farmor og jeg" og Anna Fiske: "Farmor og jeg, Passe på en puddel".
TERNINGKAST 5 i Bergens Tidende: "Palle Puddel er ingen innlysende barnebokfigur. Han har svart høyhalset genser, markerte briller og en hang til å ville snakke om kultur med puddelvennene sine. Palle Puddel er rett og slett en hipster fra rundt tusenårsskiftet, og sånn sett er det nok mange barn som kan kjenne igjen sin egen far i denne kultiverte livsnyteren – i alle fall om det er en familie med abonnement på Morgenbladet eller Klassekampen. ... Fiske har håndtverket i orden. Hun er nærmest alene i Norge om å lage tegneserier for barn på dette nivået. ... Det er med andre ord ingen grunn til å ikke introdusere småtten for kultureliten i hundeskikkelse."
Walter Wehus, BT
Innbundet, 104 sider, 17x24 cm
Trådsydd i ryggen
Palle Poodle, a Dog’s Life
What three colors are magical? How will Rita Rabbit really get the poodle party started?
Can you draw with a pair of scissors? Palle dog-swimming in Greece: How did that go?
And is it true what Palle read, that it is actually dangerous to chew meat bones?
Palle Poodle is an art-buff, he loves fresh dog-bones, and he loves to draw and to paint. Sometimes all this talk about art is just a bit too much, in Rita Rabbit’s opinion. Because, after all, there are funnier and more important things in life, such as eating carrots, and to get the poodle parties really starting.
You can read all this and many other adventures with Palle Poodle and Rita Rabbit here. Palle Poodle was one of the popular stories of Anna Fiske’s award-winning comic magazine for children, Rabbel (Scribble). Here are the stories from Rabbel about Palle and Nina collected in a book.
"Palle Poodle is no obvious children's figure. He wears a black turtleneck, horn-rimmed glasses, and has a tendency to want to talk about culture with poodle friends. Palle Poodle is actually a hipster from around the millennium, and in this respect there are probably many children who can recognize their own father in this cultured vivant – at least if it is a family with a subscription to Morgenbladet or Klassekampen <Norwegian intellectual newspapers> . ... Fiske is a master craftswoman. She is virtually alone in Norway in creating cartoons for children at this level. ... in other words, no reason not to introduce your kid to the cultural elite in dog disguise."
Walter Wehus, BT
17x24 cm, 104 pages in color.