Jake Sherman has to get his buddy Andy out of the doghouse. Fast. Because Jake was showing a really weird machine to his pals when it accidentally went off, turning his best friend into man's best friend: the Sherman family dog.
Now Andy is chasing squirrels, stealing the ball at baseball games, and bringing squeeze toys for show-and-tell. Can Jake turn Andy back into a human? Or will he have to ship his best friend off to obedience school--for life?
At first I thought this book was going to be very childish, but okay to read, plus the cover caught my attention. Starting off reading I knew this book would be easy to read, but it some way be very twisted in the storylines. As thought, I was proved correctly. To start this book is about a boy whose life is somewhat normal, but he wishes he didn't have to listen or be around his older sister. He always thought about what it would be like to be his dog, who lays in the kitchen everyday, messing up anything he finds interesting. By the way his dog is what else? untrained. That's where the story starts. The family wants to get the dog into obedience school because he doesn't listen, is always going through the garbage and knocking it over, wasting food all over the floor, and just sits in one spot all day. Of coarse he doesn't know what he's doing is wrong, so the older sister signs him up to be trained. Yet, the crazy thing was she didn't know that wasn't the dog she was taking to school, it was her brother trapped in his body!
I know that this book is aimed at 11 year olds and to be fair i've been reading them since as long as i can remember and they always get better with every read. You learn a lot of things that children should learn in school but unfortunately only the names and dates are useful in school history lessons. My children will certainly read every single one as i feel that Deary helps children learn more about the world that they are living in.
I don't know why this type of book makes me very nervous. Here I am an adult, I know it is fiction and impossible but it makes me nervous for fear they will get in trouble, get hurt or won't be able to turn him back into human. If it makes me nervous as an adult why would it be good for kids to read. No I am not crazy, Just saying.
The characters must be complete idiots to not notice a dog was in Andy's body. Even with my previous remark I still enjoyed the book I kept questioning myself "will they get caught??" and that kept me reading the book. The book was funny but some parts which we're supposed to be funny we're lame.
Very funny story!!! Great for kids between third and fifth grade, depending on reading level. - This is one of many books from Srasser's Help! Series. I highly recommend checking out some of his other books.
Horrible Histories is a series of illustrated books published in the UK by Scholastic. They are designed to get children interested in history by concentrating on the trivial, unusual, gory, or unpleasant. They are exceptionally well loved by my history loving children
Ah, a reflection on the days that I liked this series, this is the one that amused me the most. It's the rubbish dialogue and situations that made it utterly hilarious.
I pick this book because the cover is so cute and the title seems like calling me “to read it”.
I must admit this book is very funny and hilarious! The part when Jake and Josh realized that Andy been switched bodies with Lance (Jake’s dog) really makes me feel “excited, a little bit panicked, and laughed out loud many times”.
Josh with his teenager attitude that constantly blaming others for everything, but still remains loyal for his best friends, Jake with his loyal, try to act wisely and logical, and Andy who played the funny part with his dog body but human brain. The story also reminds me on how many things that could happened during 8th grade school year, specially with this switching bodies moments and how they have to act normal just to make them safe for the entire day of school.
Recommend this book for middle-grade readers who wants to experience a weird, sci-fi, how to solve problems in a teenager way, deal with every situation with logical thinking plus fun. I as an adult really enjoyed this book.
Interior I really enjoyed this book. A true to form story to take you out of the craziness of the world with something fun and crazy. I'd say the three friends. Josh, Jake and Andy really don't seem all that different from each other. From insults they jab at each other to how they respond to anything around them it's pretty identical. The main focus is on the story and what to do when your best friend becomes man's best friend.
This book teases a liar reveal trope but thankfully it doesn't actually comit which I thought was nice. I love that they actually work around it and it's not addressed especially since it means they has to figure it out on their own. I'd say it's for the best and it builds up some of the shenanigans. As s a dog, Andy's a little bit of a perv with Jessica but honestly it fits the story and adds a good number of chuckles with the circumstances that come out of it. One thing that's a bit unfortunate is that the problem with Lance being an unrulily dog is a bit overshadowed by the main plot especially with since Lance really doesn't learn anything about being a good dog and I have a feeling this is where this particular book in the series ended up having a sequel. Overall not bad, no moral, or lecture, and nothing learned. Just a little laidback fun adventure.