Reviews

Olivia and the Missing Toy by Ian Falconer

panda_incognito's review against another edition

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4.0

Like usual, Olivia will either appear feisty or bratty, depending on the reader and their standards. However, the story is certainly entertaining, with dramatic, emotionally expressive illustrations and a strong plot. I like the ending, in which Olivia
Spoilermends her torn-up toy and forgives the dog for damaging it. It's a nice message about how we can repair and keeping loving special things, and can accept other people's mistakes with grace and move on
.

clarkco's review against another edition

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5.0

This was a fun book to read aloud. It worked very well for my mystery-themed storyhour session.

caseythecanadianlesbrarian's review against another edition

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2.0

Meh. Is the plot of the books in this series always so disjointed? Although the art in the spooky part of this one was cool, I just wasn't taken with the character or the story.

larrys's review against another edition

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1.0

Olivia and the Missing Toy scary


There are several versions of the book cover, and the dark one is the scarier of the two. (The other is mostly white space, in keeping with most of the Olivia series.) This book has a gothic episode in it -- a definite spoof, with knowing use of the cliche "dark and stormy night". Below, Margaret Blount explains one reason Olivia is a pig and not a little girl:

Even more suburbanised is Russell Hoban's Frances where the child/animal substitution is so complete as to be unnoticeable. Frances the Badger is a small girl afraid of the dark, tucked up in bed but constantly annoying her parents by coming downstairs and interrupting the television. Why make her into an animal at all? The cosy delights of the Badger household -- so like a human one -- do remove the situation one or two degrees away from discomfort; some children are afraid of the dark, do dislike being alone.


-- Margaret Blount, Animal Land



As for Olivia the pig, love her or hate her. Olivia is one popular kidlit character who pisses a lot of parents off, judging by reviews I have read online. While I don't have a problem with some of the Olivia stories, this particular one annoys the hell out of me. That tends to happen when an adult reader sees a parenting style in a picturebook with which we disagree. Here we have a demanding brat, an acquiescent mother and a father who is quick to say 'I'll buy you a new one' after Olivia's own carelessness with a toy.


I don't think this is one of Falconer's best. And it doesn't just apply to the indulgent parents and bratty child character; the story structure is also a little odd and I don't think it works. Why not? Let's take a closer look.




STORY STRUCTURE


WEAKNESS/NEED

The story actually opens with 'One day Olivia was riding a camel in Europe...' but unfortunately this is the most interesting part of the story and ends there. She wakes up and this was all a dream. I'm not sure how much Falconer has had to do with young children at the time he wrote this book, but I know very few Olivia's age who need waking up by their parents. At this age they tend to leap out of bed earlier than everyone else in the house (unless their parents let them choose their own bedtimes, I suppose.) What is the reason for this opening? For one thing we do see the precious toy on the back of the camel. This shows how important the toy is to the character.

Weakness: Olivia is possibly too attached to a stuffed toy.

Next, Olivia does not like the colour of her soccer shirt.

She does not want to look like everyone else on her soccer team, even though the whole point of the uniform is to look like everyone else. (Explained by the mother.)

This particular weakness does not endear me to this character, as I feel it's a self-absorbed and bratty kind of trait.

DESIRE

Olivia wants her mother to make her a red soccer shirt to replace the team green one. (The mother initially points out why this is a bad idea, then sets to work making the shirt anyway, on her sewing machine.)

This desire doesn't work for me as a reader because soccer simply doesn't work if everyone is wearing a random coloured shirt. The story should have been shut down right there.

OPPONENT

The opponent is introduced before we find out his exact mischief, and interestingly, we only see half of his little body at first. (The rest is off the page -- as is the mischief.)

This is a nice technique.

An adult reader might be thinking Olivia's true opponents are her over-indulgent parents. (They are making a monster.)

PLAN

When Olivia realises her toy is missing she:

  • Demands to know where it is by yelling at her mother.

  • Yells even more loudly in her bedroom.

  • Looks everywhere, including under the rug, under the sofa and under the (long-suffering) cat.

  • Asks her little brother, and yells at him accusingly.

  • Asks her baby brother, and yells at him even more loudly. (Volume is conveyed via capitalisation and font size.)




When none of these behaviours result in the location of the toy, Olivia gets up at night and plays the piano. (How this doesn't wake the entire family, I'm not sure.) While giving up the hunt for the beloved toy is realistic given her young age, readers do love heroes who persevere. Olivia is neither a persevering nor a patient pig. (She is, however, petulant and possessive, riffing on the p's.)


BATTLE

With the switch to the gothic genre, signified by the darkened rooms, the candelabra, the realistically depicted lightning bolt which illuminates the bars on the window, and finally by the scary noise, Olivia checks out the sound coming from behind the door.


SELF-REVELATION

Olivia finds her toy, but there is no self-revelation. She runs to her parents (it's now the next morning, and yet again we have another stereotypical depiction of the father reading the newspaper while the mother cares for the youngest kid), and Olivia tattle-tales on the dog, expecting her parents to do something about the situation. The mother expresses her condolences. The father says, "Don't worry, tomorrow we'll go get you the best toy in the whole world."

I really really want him to say, "Serves you right for leaving it lying around. Now go fix it."

Fortunately, despite the indulgent parenting style of her parents, Olivia decides to fix the toy herself and shows great initiative by sewing it up herself. This is why I don't mind Olivia; it's her parents who shit me to tears. The other nice thing about Olivia as a character is that she is happy with her self-fixed toy even though it looks nothing like it did before. She doesn't throw any tantrums about lacking the skills to fix it properly.

It's interesting that Falconer didn't want the words 'All better" on this page, but the editor insisted upon it.

[Falconer] says he lost one argument: the addition of the words "All better" when Olivia repairs her missing and mangled toy. "A mommy phrase," says the author. "Something kids would repeat," says the editor.


NEW EQUILIBRIUM

Olivia holds a brief grudge against the dog and won't let her mother read her any books about dogs for this one night.

And if you were wondering about what those books are (only partially depicted on the page):

She's shown carrying four titles: The Cat in the Hat, Puss in Boots. Krazy Kat and Kitty Foyle.


Kitty Foyle? "A 1930s movie with Ginger Rogers," Falconer says. "A little joke that no one will get."


USA Today



"But even Olivia couldn't stay mad forever". She lets him sleep in her bed, along with the mended toy.




MCGUFFINS AS PLOT DEVICE: GOOD MCGUFFIN, BAD MCGUFFIN



Here's the problem with this plot: The whole sequence with the shirt is a Macguffin. A m(a)cguffin, sometimes called 'a weenie' is a plot device whose function is to get the action going, but which may be forgotten or become irrelevant by the end of the story. Others use the term simply to mean 'anything that gets the plot rolling'. But technically, by Hitchcock's definition -- he invented it -- a true McGuffin must be forgotten by the audience.


Sure enough, we've forgotten all about the shirt by the end of the story, as has Olivia.


A famous example of a McGuffin is in the film Psycho, in which Marion Crane steals money early in the film, which brings her to the Bates Hotel. By the end of the film, no one cares about what happened to the money.



Olivia and the Missing Toy is, of course, a spoof of a psychological drama such as Psycho. (The colour scheme of black, red and white lends the series really well to a spoof of something horrific.) So Falconer opened with a technique often used in that form. Here's a question: Can the McGuffin work as well in a picture book? In a story of 42 pages, 11 (excluding the camel scene opener) are taken up by the whole shirt palaver. (On the eleventh page it is seen cast aside, as Olivia descends into her tantrum.) That's a huge portion of the entire story.



The first question is: Why does the McGuffin work in Psycho?




  1. It gives Marion Crane a reason to skip town and removes the option of going back. (Plot reasons.)

  2. It gives the character of Marion Crane a moral weakness, which the audience needs in order to see the character as rounded. A moral weakness also makes a character more interesting.

  3. It gives the audience a satisfying frisson of 'serves you right' when Marion is scared out of her wits.


As for the McGuffin in Olivia and the Missing Toy:

  1. There is not real plot reason for this McGuffin.

  2. It gives the character of Olivia a moral weakness -- she treats her family badly when she loses something.

  3. There is no satisfaction for the audience here, because Olivia is a brat without a cause.




fernandapazcg's review against another edition

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4.0

Lo amo, pero ¿qué pasó con la camiseta?

abs171910's review against another edition

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4.0

Read to Sam. Justice for Mom.

kitm's review against another edition

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5.0

The Olivia series in general is really cute - but some of these books depict less than gentle parenting. This book avoids that while being funny for the adult.

pussreboots's review against another edition

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5.0

Olivia ... an the Missing Toy is the third story that I've read to Sean and Harriet. The series by Ian Falconer continues to delight all of us.

In this story, Olivia is missing her favorite toy. She searches everywhere: under the rug, the sofa, the cat and so forth. She tries interrogating her brothers; it doesn't work.

In the end she finds the toy but finding it brings heart-break. Olivia, though, in her usual way, bounces back and the book ends on a happy note.

amdame1's review against another edition

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3.0

Olivia the pig loses her favorite toy! A definite crisis. Kids will be able to relate. I think it is not as strong as most of the other Olivia books. This one has splashes of green to accent the usual black, white and red.

emvsmith's review against another edition

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4.0

Summary (worldcat): When her best toy mysteriously disappears, Olivia the feisty pig is determined to find out who is responsible.

Review: Olivia is hilarious and supercute. She perfectly reflects the short attention span and impatience found often, but not exclusively, in preschoolers and young children. The illustrations really make the story, and often make me laugh....out loud. I love how Olivia looks when she is so tired of waiting, and the silliness of her practicing a piano on dark and stormy night, the candleabra is a nice touch. There are so many other little details that when brought together make this a rather fabulous book.

Lukewarm review from SLJ, they call the plot "meandering" and Olivia "more like a bratty bully than the charming nonconformist we know and love".

Horn Book gives a slightly more positive review. "Falconer pads the slender plot with some more of Olivia's characteristic mugging. The drawing is superb.."