Woof! is a children's novel by Allen Ahlberg from 1986. As with all his books, the emphasis is on humour, a chatty confidential tone, and telling a good story from a child's point of view.
"There was once a boy who turned into a dog. The boy's name was Eric Banks; he was ten years old. The dog he turned into was a Norfolk terrier."
The story which follows is cheerfully and simply told, with situations familiar to almost every child. Friends, parents, school life - Ahlberg immerses himself in a child's world, and seems to get inside a child's skin, so that the experiences in his stories, even fantastical ones such as this, are believable and endearing to child and adult alike.
We follow Eric and his best friend Roy, his little sister Emily and his parents, through a few extraordinary weeks as he shifts between being Eric the child and Eric the dog. The typical fears of a child are there; vague fears of his parents and teachers, and of the school bully. Only his slightly dim friend Roy is "in the know" about the amazing secret, and the ensuing adventures are very funny. Everything is told with a child's logic, a child's sense of what is fair.
The two get into adventures and scrapes in all the places a child might go, such as the classroom, the swimming baths, the library, and the chip shop. Plus there are entertaining events such as the school sports day, of which the head teacher is very proud. Of course we are rooting for Eric the dog throughout. We know that he is bound to save the day, when there is a potentially dangerous situation, and we are even more satisfied and pleased when a kind of explanation of the shape-shifting is presented at the end.
The book consists of 21 chapters, and although more text-heavy than many of his books, it is a straightforward entertaining read. It would be suitable for any youngish children, who can cope with short sentences. Alternatively it is a good story to read aloud, with obvious points at which to break for dramatic effect. There are humorous line drawings by Fritz Wegner inserted into the text, which add to the pleasure of reading for both adults and children.
Allen Ahlberg is a prolific and deservedly popular British children's writer. From his origins adopted into what he calls "a very poor working-class family" in the English Black Country, he went on to try many jobs, eventually training to become a primary school teacher. He continued in this profession for over a decade, now maintaining that it is "much harder" than being a writer. Evidently it has stood him in good stead in becoming familiar with the attitudes and internal workings of the mind of a child.
He has co-authored many children's picture books and series with his wife, Janet, who also illustrated them. Examples are "Each Peach Pear Plum", which won the prestigious "Kate Greenaway" medal from the Library Association, "The Jolly Postman", which Ahlberg says, "made innovative use of envelopes to include letters, cards, games and a tiny book." "Peepo!" and "Burglar Bill". These books regularly appeared at the top of the list of most popular picture books for about twenty years. Allen Ahlberg has also written many stories and books of poetry for children under his own name, for many years, and has continued to do so since Janet Ahlberg died. Examples of these are "Mr Cosmo the Conjuror", "Please Mrs. Butler", and "The Pencil". In July 2014, Allan Ahlberg declined a "Lifetime Achievement Award" with a substantial money prize attached. The given reason was because of ethical grounds related to the award's principal sponsor.
For further examples of this author's hugely entertaining children's books, see my bookshelves.