"The Digging-est Dog" by Al Perkins is a book about a dog who did not have a home until he met a young boy at the store where he was kept.
The characters include Duke, the dog who was at the store who is lonely and wants a home. Sam, the boy who took Duke home. Sam is a kind boy who feels bad for Duke when he is in the shop and decides to take him home. The pack of dogs are the local dogs who Sam hooks Duke up with, they are judgmental of dukes inability to dig and are overall the problem in the book.
One day Sam walked by a store and noticed a sad looking dog in the window. He went inside and offered to purchase the dog and take him to his farm. He brought him home and named him Duke. Duke was an outside dog. When he met up with the pack of dogs, they started digging. Duke, from years of sitting on the cold, stone tile, did not know how to dig. He tried and tried, but still could not dig. Sam tried teaching him how to dig, but Duke just kept falling on his face and his back. One morning he decided to try it one last time. He finally got the hang of it. When Sam saw him digging he was overjoyed. Once Duke started digging he didn't want to stop. He dug up the entire city including highway 81, the barber shop, a garden, chickens and hens and some seeds. When Sam found out, he was furious and threatened to take him back to the pound. Duke felt sad and decided to dig a hole straight down. When he hit water he started to sink. The pack of dogs came to save him. After that, Duke knew he needed to fix all that he'd dug up. He went around town fixing the barber shop, the gardens and even Highway 81. He worked until everything was back to normal. Sam decided to keep Duke.
The setting of the story takes place during the spring mostly in the country. Because it was the country, there was a lot of room to dig. However, it still wasn't enough room for Duke. He had to go into town to dig as well.
Thematic connection- Don't make any more of a mess than you're willing to clean up. In this book Duke eventually learns to dig, when he does he goes overboard with it and nearly destroys the city. Luckily he sees the wrong in his action and fixes everything he destroyed. Duke finds that things are usually better in moderation.
I would recommend this book to young children and members of PETA.