4th, 5th, Middle School ; Hard Cover, Fiction, Realistic ; Recommended

Poppy

Poppy, the pit bull, and Hannah, the new girl in town, have similar trials to overcome. Poppy must live with the bad reputation pit bulls have of being vicious. Hannah must overcome the misconceptions new people have of her when they see the “reddish-purple birthmark that covered almost half of her face.” (1)

Hannah’s family moved from Michigan to California the summer before she will start sixth grade. Hannah suffers from the typical dismays young people experience when they move away from their friends and familiar surroundings. Next door to her, Poppy is a rambunctious six month old puppy Hannah’s neighbor, Mrs. Gilly, who is recovering from hip surgery, has for companionship. Poppy is a bit too much for Mrs. Gilly to handle as she recovers from her hip surgery. Hannah suddenly volunteers to take Poopy for walks and eventually to train Poppy, so Poppy won’t be taken back to the shelter.

Poppy and Hannah become inseparable as they both work to fit into their new home situations. Training Poppy helps Hannah develop the confidence she needs. “Hannah and Poppy were totally in sync, as if they’d learned to share different facets of their personalities–as if Poopy had gained some of Hannah’s calm seriousness and Hannah had gained some of Poppy’s happy confidence.” (196-197)

Once the story concludes, Jennifer Shotz has added a three page section – ALL ABOUT THE PIT BULL to inform readers about pit bulls. This is followed by the first two chapters of her book BRAVE, also in the American Dog series.