Don't Forget the Bacon!

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Don't Forget the Bacon!
Don't Forget the Bacon.jpg
Book cover
Author Pat Hutchins
IllustratorPat Hutchins
LanguageEnglish
SubjectShopping
Genre Children's literature
Publisher Bodley Head
Publication date
1976
Publication placeEngland
Media typePrint (Hardcover)
OCLC 001504849
LC Class 75017935

Don't Forget the Bacon! is a children's book written and illustrated by Pat Hutchins. It was published by Bodley Head in 1976. The story is about a little boy who tries to memorise a list of groceries his mother has asked him to buy. The book has been used as a teaching tool to instruct children about early learning concepts.

Contents

In an analysis of teaching tools for remedial readers, Maurice Saxby notes in the book Books in the Life of a Child: Bridges to Literature & Learning, "Hutchins's Don't Forget the Bacon has been one of my most successful texts." Andrea Hillbrick's Tuning in with Task Cards includes a teaching lesson structured around the boy's shopping list from the story. The book Foundation Blocks suggests Don't Forget the Bacon! be used to teach children about the concept of miscommunication, and Bilinguality and Literacy lists the story among those used to help assist a bilingual child develop fluency in English.

Don't Forget the Bacon! was a success in England and the United States, and received positive reception from the American Library Association, and The Washington Post . The story was recommended in 2005 as part of a children's reading challenge announced by the Education Minister for New South Wales, Australia, and included in suggested reading by The Times as part of the 2008 recognition of World Book Day.

Plot

A little boy leaves his home with his dog (to go grocery shopping) for his mother. And he attempts to remember the list of things she wanted him to buy. The original request from his mother is "six farm eggs, a cake for tea, a pound of pears, and don't forget the bacon". (That is, when the readers see the first page. The mother says to the child, "Six farm eggs, a cake for tea, a pound of pears, and don't forget the bacon".) Along with the dog, he is accompanied by a butterfly.

In order to avoid forgetting items, the boy recites his mother's list to himself. (The boy, he still thinks about the wrongs things. And he buys and does the wrong things.) Throughout his trip to the grocery store, the boy sees things along the way that play tricks with his memory, and items on his list one-by-one become substituted with other goods. For the first item, "six farm eggs" becomes "six fat legs", then "six clothes pegs". The second one, "A cake for tea" becomes "a cape for me", then "a rake for leaves". Finally, for the third, "a pound of pears" becomes "A flight of stairs", then "a pile of chairs". By the end of his trip, the boy has forgotten the initial items requested, and supplants them in his mind with "Six clothes pegs, a rake for leaves, a pile of chairs, and don't forget the bacon".

The boy still keeps the joke list (not knowing that it is incorrect). Finally, he goes to the junk shop, sees a merchant/technician there, and says to a merchant/technician, "Six clothes pegs, a rake for leaves, and a pile of chairs please!". Before the boy is about to buy the six clothes pegs, the rake for leaves, and the pile of chairs, the merchant gets confused and finds this sort of odd. At first, the merchant/technician is confused. But he does not think it is funny. As a result, he assists the boy. And he compiles with him about this odd list.

The merchant/technician knows that the boy was given a correct list. But it was "six clothes pegs, a rake for leaves, and a pile of chairs" that the boy asked for instead. The merchant/technician knows that the boy is just playing jokes (fooling around). While traveling back to his home, the boy remembers the original items (on his and his mother's grocery list). After he remembers the original items that his mother requested, he --one by one-- buys the correct items and corrects his mistakes (while traveling back home).

Then on the way home, he says to himself, "Six farm eggs, a cake for tea, and a pound of pears". After saying that, he is content that he has remembered those three items. He says it again, but this time out loud, "SIX FARM EGGS, A CAKE FOR TEA, AND A POUND OF PEARS!".

When he gets home, he says, "I FORGOT THE BACON!". True to that saying, he has forgotten the bacon. At that, he says out loud, "I FORGOT THE BACON!", and his mother gasps out loud.

The final page depicts the child carrying a basket and a coin purse, taking his dog attached to a leash on a trip to get the bacon. The boy's mother collects the three original items --before he forgot the bacon-- and does an en-route to a trip to buy the bacon (which he forgot). The child declares that he should write down the groceries on a paper list the next time he goes shopping. That is, so he does not get distracted again.

Themes

In his work Best Books for Beginning Readers, Thomas G. Gunning places Don't Forget the Bacon! within the themes of utilising humor in the learning process with children. [1] Don't Forget the Bacon! has been used as a learning tool for children in education, in order to teach them about various themes including miscommunication, [2] responsibility, [3] and the reliability of spoken language. [4] In an analysis of teaching tools for remedial readers, Maurice Saxby notes in the book Books in the Life of a Child: Bridges to Literature & Learning, "Hutchins's Don't Forget the Bacon has been one of my most successful texts." [5] The book is utilised in author Andrea Hillbrick's Tuning in with Task Cards as a teaching lesson: children are assigned to collect items from the initial and final versions of the shopping list from the boy in the story, and subsequently total the prices of the tabulated items. [6] It is listed by Manjula Datta in the book Bilinguality and Literacy: Principles and Practice among stories to help assist a bilingual child develop fluency in the English language. [7] Joy Palmer and Joanna C. Birch list the book in their work Geography in the Early Years as a recommendation for children among "Story Books Suitable as Starting Points in Geography". [8] In her book Foundation Blocks: Personal, Social and Emotional Development, Mavis Brown suggests the story be used to teach children about the theme of miscommunication. [2] The story is used in a case study in education, which is cited in the book Improving Teaching and Learning in the Core Curriculum by Kate Ashcroft and John Lee. [4] Children were read the story, and then asked "about how and why spoken language is sometimes unreliable – and its consequences." [4]

Books including Belair Early Years: Stories, [9] Books as Bridges: Using Text to Connect Home and School Literacy and Learning, [10] Funny Photo Alphabet: Teaching Guide, [11] and What Is It About Me You Can't Teach? suggest the story be used to teach children about rhyming, repetition, and prediction. [12] The story is suggested for use in curriculum to teach children about food, in books Humanics National Preschool Assessment Handbook, [13] and The Complete Daily Curriculum for Early Childhood. [14] Mildred R. Donoghue writes in Language Arts: Integrating Skills for Classroom Teaching that the story should be utilised in the course of primary education. [15] In their work Success in Reading and Writing, authors Barbara J. Blackford, Helen Cappleman and Betty Cramer suggest the book be read aloud to children in kindergarten, and the teacher should subsequently quiz members of the class to see if they can recall items from the boy's shopping list. [16] Authors Diane Stirling, Linda McKay, Georgia Archibald and Shelley Berg recommend the story in their book Character Education Connections: For School, Home and Community, in order to teach children the character trait of responsibility: "A willingness to be accountable for your own actions without blaming others." [3]

Background

Pat Hutchins was born 18 June 1942. [17] A native of Yorkshire, she attended a local art school for three years on scholarship before studying illustration at the Leeds College of Art. Hutchins's first children's work, Rosie's Walk, was named a 1968 ALA Notable Book, and her book The Wind Blew received the 1974 Kate Greenaway Medal. She lives in London and has written twenty-five books and five novels. [18]

Publication history

Don't Forget the Bacon! was published by Bodley Head in 1976. [19] It was published again in New York by Greenwillow Books in 1976, and Puffin Books in 1976 and 1978. [20] [21] [22] An edition by imprint Picture Puffin was published in London in 1978. [23] Imperial Educational Resources produced a version of the story in 1980, as a filmstrip geared for children in primary school. [24] It was published by Live Oak Media in 2004, [25] and by Paw Prints in 2009. [26] Gallaudet University produced a DVD video edition aimed at youth versed in sign language. [27]

Reception

Don't Forget the Bacon! became a successful book in both England and the United States; [28] Hutchins has become known for the work. [29] Sharron L. McElmeel wrote in An Author a Month (for Nickels), "This is an example of Hutchins's more realistic drawings and of a reversible text." [20] A reversible text refers to a story which proceeds in the forward direction, and concludes with the protagonist returning to a development introduced at the story's inception. [20] The American Library Association gave Don't Forget the Bacon! favourable mention in its review of the book, "The picture book crowd (kindergarten through second grade) will adore Pat Hutchin's story of a grocery list and a bad memory." [30] In an article for The Washington Post , associate professor and director of the reading clinic at Western Maryland College, Joan Coley, observed that the repetitive nature of the story is appealing to children. [31]

Michele Landsberg, author of Reading for the Love of It: Best Books for Young Readers noted in an article for The Washington Post that Pat Hutchins is "best known" for her "witty picture books", including Don't Forget the Bacon!. [32] In 2005, New South Wales, Australia, Education Minister Carmel Tebutt announced Don't Forget the Bacon! had been included as part of "Premier's Reading Challenge", under the section, "The 2006 Challenge Book Lists: Years K-2 Challenge". [33] In 2008, Elizabeth McFarlane of The Times included the book in a list of works recommended to encourage children's reading skills for World Book Day. [34]

See also

Endnotes

^[A] Secondary source references consulted to assist in summarising information for Plot section include Brodt 1987, [35] Elleman 1976, [30] and McElmeel 1990. [20]

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References

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  22. LCCN   77-13096
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