Arnold Stark Lobel was a popular American author of children's books. Among his most popular books are those of the Frog and Toad series, and Mouse Soup, which won the Garden State Children's Book Award from the New Jersey Library Association.
Loose variant on Little Red Hen. Love it! A little dated, especially the art, but if your family can appreciate something 'retro' and aren't overly sensitive to the lazy husband cliche, this is cute. The clever wife isn't vengeful, though for the sake of the pattern of the story she does work too hard for too long.
This is an interesting moral fable about a hard-working farmer's wife and her husband, whom she must coerce into doing work. This book has surely found many appreciative readers over the years.
This is one of my favorite picture books. I had pretty much forgotten about it when I picked it up recently. Love the illustrations. I want to frame the picture of the pigs eating at the table. A lot of these reviews are down on insulting the husband as being lazy, but reading this as an adult, I know it's true that ladies have to pick up all the slack for their useless husbands. Also he may have needed an SSRI? Moral of this story is Mrs. Farmer and the pigs would have been fine on their own eating corn and playing in the garden.
I wanted to like this book but didn’t. The farmer was a selfish jerk, but on top of that I couldn’t suspend my disbelief long enough to accept that there could be such a thing as a lazy farmer. Every farmer I’ve ever known has been tremendously hard working. The illustrations are great though.
Story of a lazy farmer, which as others have mentioned, is the exact opposite of any farmers I know. But teaches children a good lesson in helping out when they say they will and that most things they want in life will require effort and hard work.
SO silly and fun, I really like this one. It is absurd, ridiculous, and still carries a strong lesson of love, loyalty, and ethics. We read it with the characters having strong Swiss accents, which adds to the fun. I really like this one, illustrations especially.
I don't usually rate children's books bad. If I don't like it, I chalk it up to personal preference and move on. Something about this really bothered me though. I didn't like the language at all. This is a children's book and calling the farmer lazy, lazy, lazy every page left a bad taste in my mouth. I don't know why. Maybe I'm weird. I don't like to focus on people who aren't ambitious with my children. I try to do lesson learning without the blame game. There is a much better book about the benefits of a strong work ethic called Tops & Bottoms.
I remember my mother reading me this book when I was a child, so it was a really nostalgia moment when I found it again at the library. I had a great time reading it to my own boys.
A farmer and his wife agree to get some pigs. The wife makes her husband promise he will help her raise them, but he's so lazy he keeps making ridiculous excuses to not help with the pig. The woman counters each of his excuses by making the pigs do what he wants (even going so far as to tie them all in a tree) and still her lazy husband won't help!
A wife teaches her lazy husband a lesson in this fable like story.
Veg*n families note: The reason the couple is raising the pigs is not clear, references are not made to eating them. There is, however, a delightful illustration of the pigs sitting with the couple around the dinner table, with all of them eating corn and mashed potatoes. It would be deducible from the illustrations that the pigs are companions.
This book is a how-to for anyone who has a lazy husband. Not a problem I have but I'm keeping it on my shelf just in case. This book is also good if you want to know what it takes to raise a pig. I'm not sure if the author/illustrator ( a husband and wife team) are trying to say something about the parallels in those situations or not but it's a cute story.
This book was discarded from a public school library. It is hardcover and in good shape. The story is decent enough. No award-winner, but fine just the same. The illustrations are quite good.
A lazy farmer buys some pigs but refuses to do what is needed to care for them. His wife ends up doing all the work. She cleverly puts an end to his laziness.
Arnold and Anita Lobel were a great team of author/illustrator. Arnold has been deceased for quite some time. In this collaboration is a story of a lazy farmer whose wife has to do all the work until she finally tricks the farmer into helping her. Anita Lobel's illustrations have a medieval look and go well with the story line.
Why the wife didn't just get a divorce instead of put up with such a lazy husband is beyond me. Those pigs are pretty smart to go along. I was worried they were going to eat the pigs at the end, but thankfully they didn't (whoops, spoilers).
I liked it all. It was funny when the farmer kept saying I'll do it tomorrow and then the pigs disappeared but they were tied in the tree by the woman (farmer's wife).
This folk tale is priceless. Arnold and Anita Lobel never fail to deliver and this book is no exception. I will be very old and grey and still reading this book.
A Treeful of Pigs is about a farmer who promises his wife to help her with all the hard work that comes along with taking care of pigs. He doesn’t keep his promise but the farmer’s wife outsmarts him in the end. The story line makes it a fun and enjoyable read for students but can also help them when learning about farm animals. The book also offers the reader with the underlying message that one should always help the people that they are surrounded by. This can be used in the classroom when learning about expectations with helping classmates and peers.