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Library Binding Bad Bear Detectives Book

ISBN: 061843125X

ISBN13: 9780618431250

Bad Bear Detectives

(Part of the Irving and Muktuk Series)

When a shipment of imported Italian muffins goes missing, Irving and Muktuk become the key suspects. Everyone knows their weakness for muffins and immediately think they are responsible! Irving and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Library Binding

Condition: Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Delightful and Funny

Good Night Lullabies I love the characters of Irving and Muktuk. They are always getting into mischief which is harmless and funny. I've given these books as gifts to my grandsons as a welcome relief from super heroes and transformers.

On the Waterfront

Those Bayonne Bears are back, and there's not a safe muffin in all of New Jersey. "Bad Bear Detectives" is another delicious book in Daniel and Jill Pinkwater's hilarious "Irving and Muktuk" series, and it's one of their funniest. While Daniel Pinkwater specializes in combining the outrageous with the dryly understated (much as James Stevenson does in his stories about Grandpa and Wainey), `Detectives' has some of the funniest lines of all the "Bear" books, and Jill Pinkwater's colorful backgrounds and imaginatively drawn backdrops and bears (the latter are so uncomplicated and sheer white that they seem to leap off the page) engage the reader and convey the slyly innocent, but oh-so-guilty personalities of the muffin-obsessed bears. When determined Police Captain Hare fingers Irving and Muktuk as the prime suspects in a heist of "expensive Italian designer muffins from the waterfront, the bears take a break from cheating at poker to proclaim their innocence: "This is bad," Muktuk says, "Make one mistake and anytime a muffin is missing, the coppers are all over you." It is unfair, "Irving says. "Of course, we have made more than one mistake," Muktuk says. Unfortunately, their history of muffin larceny (stretching from Alaska to the Bayonne muffin factory) is so well known that not even the zoo director sides with them, and even offers a punishment: "If it is proven that they took the muffins, they will be locked in their [apartment-like] room at night, and they will have to pick up trash around the zoo for a year." However, the bears are so convinced of their innocence (or have a huge capacity for denial) that they resolve to "remove the smirch from their names," by stealing detective hats and finding the true culprit. "Isn't it a bad idea, where we are going to prove that we did not steal something, to start out by stealing hats?" Irving asks. In Pinkwater's usual deadpan style, Muktuk replies, "We have no choice...without hats, we would be spotted as polar bears in a second." There's only one soft spot in the story, some good detective-bad detective interrogation of a watchman that doesn't quite fit, but two pages later Pinkwater returns to prime Irving and Muktuk form: "If you were a bear..." Muktuk says. "I am a bear," Irving says. IF you were a bear, and you took the muffins, what would you do next?" Muktuk asks. "I would eat them!" Muktuk says. With their working theory that bears must have stolen the muffins, Irving and Muktuk have inside knowledge of the muffins' location. They're so familiar with the loot that they pick up the smell of "mirtilli dell'italia, or blueberries of Italy, and--surprise!--the scent of bear! Still hanging onto their excuse that they're after some other muffin-loving bears, Irving and Muktuk lead us back to the Bayonne zoo ( ! ), where they find the muffins behind a waterfall next to the polar bear pool! They're slightly soggy, but good enough to finish off. "So, it was us! We did take the muffin

Another winner in the "Two Bad Bears" series!

We love Irving and Muktuk.... My son is almost 6 and we have been reading about the bears for several years now. They are two mischievious polar bears who are always in one mess or another. They are as clever as they are mischievious and of course Daniel Pinkwater is ever so clever and mischievious too!! We have a little girl now and I can hardly wait for her to get into these books! Be sure to check out the "Larry" books too, by the same author!

A comedy routine masquerading as a children's book!

This was a thoroughly fun book to read. When I review a kid's book I normally flip through all the pages to see the pictures in order to see if the pictures tell the story. At first glance I thought this was going to be a dud of a book since the pictures don't really tell the story. But when I started reading the text I was pleasantly surprised. It had me chuckling a bit at spots. It's 30 pages long. The story is about two dumb polar bears that live in the Bayonne NJ zoo. They are accused of stealing food and they go about trying to figure out who actually stole the food so they won't get in trouble. While reading the text in this book I felt like I was sitting in the audience of a Toastmasters humorous speech contest and I was listening to the winning speaker give his talk. I would have liked the book better if the illustrations had been larger and more detailed so children would get more from them when they see them during a reading. But the book is really the text, and the illustrations are a sideshow. 5 stars!

A recommended pick for ages 6-8.

Irving and Muktuk have been accused of the baked goods crime of the century - but the bears are innocent, and set out to clear their bad reputations. This is the fourth book in the Irving and Muktuk series, but the first we've seen: it's a lovely detective story spiced with Jill Pinkwater's fine drawings and is a recommended pick for ages 6-8. Diane C. Donovan California Bookwatch
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