60 pages • 2 hours read
Sharon CreechA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
“I don’t want to
because boys
don’t write poetry.
Girls do.”
Jack’s claim that only girls write poetry speaks to his personal bias—and is contrary to literary history. Historically, readers took male writers as a whole more seriously than women. The first two poems the class reads are written by men, but Miss Stretchberry’s curriculum also comes to include women.
“I don’t understand
the poem about
the red wheelbarrow
and the white chickens
and why so much
depends upon
them.”
Miss Stretchberry uses poems such as William Carlos Williams’s “The Red Wheelbarrow” as mentor texts. These texts provide acclaimed writing examples that students can study and imitate. As students read more poetry, they acclimate to different styles and accumulate resources with which to create their own work—even if the process is confusing at first.
“What do you mean—
Why does so much depend
upon
a blue car?
You didn’t say before
that I had to tell why.
The wheelbarrow guy
didn’t tell why.”
Miss Stretchberry pushes Jack to consider diction and think critically about his writing. Williams doesn’t explain why the red wheelbarrow matters, but his poem still makes an impact; readers can form their own interpretations based on the brief imagery and setting given. Jack doesn’t reveal the blue car’s significance until the climax, but it’s clearly a sensitive topic.
“I don’t want to
write about that blue car
that had miles to go
before it slept,
so many miles to go
in such a hurry.”
Jack imitates mentor texts in many journal entries, like he does here with Robert Frost’s “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening”—albeit with a few simple substitutions. Jack associates Frost’s diction with his own blue car; this entry begins with his own thoughts before lapsing into borrowed lines when he mentions the blue car again. In the final line, Jack even infuses his own voice—plain and colloquial—with Frost’s famous lines.
“(But still don’t tell anyone
who wrote them, okay?)
(And what does anonymous mean?
Is it good?)”
Jack punctuates these lines with parentheses to show that he’s speaking to Miss Stretchberry in confidence—which subsequently implies that these are thoughts about which he is sensitive. Jack is protective of the poetry that he shares. The second stanza reveals that he doesn’t want to look ignorant, so he asks what a particular word means and whether it’s a good thing.
“It’s not a poem.
Is it?
I guess you can
put it on the board
if you want to
but don’t put
my name
on it
in case
other people
think
it’s not a poem.”
Jack questions what makes a poem a true poem. He also betrays his self-conscious side when implying that he cares about his peers’ opinions of his work. Yet, he’s also curious about said opinions upon receiving his teacher’s positive feedback.
“And I liked the picture
of the yellow dog
you put beside it.
But that’s not how
my yellow dog
looked.”
And you said that
Mr. Robert Frost
who wrote
about the pasture
was also the one
who wrote about
those snowy woods
and the miles to go
before he sleeps
well!
I think Mr. Robert Frost
has a little
too
much
time
on his
hands.”
Jack voices a thought that many poetry students have: Poets dedicate their entire careers writing (often) confusing poetry, and some may wonder what the point is. The story delves into this, but every student must wrestle with this question before arriving at a meaningful answer. Jack’s distinctly boyish humor permeates the second stanza to lighten the mood while still inviting readers to consider his accusation’s implications.
“Maybe the wheelbarrow poet
was just
making a picture
with words
and
someone else—
like maybe his teacher—
typed it up
and then people thought
it was a poem
because
it looked like one
typed up like that.
And maybe
that’s the same thing
that happened with
Mr. Robert Frost.
Maybe he was just
making pictures with words
about the snowy woods
and the pasture—
and his teacher
typed them up
and they looked like poems
so people thought
they were poems.”
Jack understands the world based on his own experiences, his first-person point of view inviting readers to get to know him. Even if readers disagree with Jack’s assessment, they can understand his feelings toward publication in relation to other poets. The burgeoning poet grows confident in his ability to incorporate new elements in his work—and that his work is of value.
“And that’s where we saw
the yellow dog
standing against the cage
with his paws curled
around the wire
and his long red tongue
hanging out
and his big black eyes
looking a little sad
and his long tail
wag-wag-wagging
as if he were saying
Me me me! Choose me!
And we did.
We chose him.”
Jack narrates the day he took Sky home like a fairy tale, as though destiny prompted him to choose the yellow dog. He ends this stanza on a distinctly happily-ever-after note despite the story’s true ending being tragic. As Jack allows himself to remember and write about Sky, he recalls good memories alongside sad ones.
“And the other dogs
in the cages
get killed dead
if nobody chooses them.”
“My street is not
in the middle
of the city
so it doesn’t have
that LOUD music
of horns and trucks
clash
flash
screech.
My street is
on the edge
of a city
and it has
quiet music
most of the time
whisp
meow
swish.”
Inspired by the mentor text “Street Music” by Arnold Adoff, Jack experiments with onomatopoeia to describe his neighborhood. He chooses sounds that feel characteristic of a quiet street—an important detail relevant to Sky’s story. Jack also makes a connection between mundane life and music, discovering that poetry can make art out of everyday experiences.
“At both ends
of our street
are yellow signs
that say
Caution! Children at Play!
but sometimes
the cars
pay no attention
and speed down
the road
as if
they are in a BIG hurry
with many miles to go
before they sleep.”
Jack emphasizes the color yellow throughout the book: the yellow dog, the yellow paper, and now, the yellow street signs. Yellow represents happiness in different ways; Sky is joy, the yellow paper is the pride Jack takes in publication, and the yellow street signs are supposed to represent safety. But when the aforementioned blue car ignores the yellow street signs, tragedy strikes.
“I am sorry
I took the book home
without asking.
I only got
one spot
on it.
That’s why
the page is torn.
I tried to get
the spot
out.”
Jack takes Walter Dean Myers’s poetry book home so that he can copy his favorite poem. Due to Love That Dog’s free verse format, there aren’t many words per page. This stanza feels like a strange detail to include in a book already so short on space, but details like these sprinkled throughout the story add character—strengthening readers’ connection to the protagonist and investment in his growth.
“And when us kids
were playing outside
kicking the ball
he’d chase after it
and push it with his nose
push push push
and getting slobber
all over the ball
but no one cared
because he was such
a funny dog
that dog Sky
that straggly furry
smiling
dog
Sky.”
“but don’t type up
that other secret one
I wrote—
the one all folded up
in the envelope
with tape on it.
That one uses too many of
Mr. Walter Dean Myers’s
words
and maybe
Mr. Walter Dean Myers
would get mad
about that.”
Jack foreshadows the plot’s direction by mentioning, but not publicly sharing, a secret poem that borrows from Myers’s work. This detail evokes the reader’s curiosity and creates a loose end that comes to fruition on the book’s final page. Though readers only hear Jack’s voice in the story, this stanza counts as one of the few times in which he omits contextual details.
“And thank you
for typing up
my secret poem
the one that uses
so many of
Mr. Walter Dean Myers’s
words
and I like what
you put
at the top:
Inspired by Walter Dean Myers.
That sounds good
to my ears.
Now no one
will think
I just copied
Because I
couldn’t think
of my own words.
They will know
I was
inspired by
Mr. Walter Dean Myers.”
Jack indeed feels uncomfortable plagiarizing other people’s work. Miss Stretchberry finds a way to appropriately reframe plagiarism as learning from a mentor text. Jack appreciates the phrase “Inspired by Walter Dean Myers” similarly to how he appreciates the rhythms and sounds in certain poems. Miss Stretchberry not only reframes the borrowed poem as exactly that, but she also makes the idea of borrowing—or inspiration—intrinsic to the poem’s greater meaning, making it feel intentional and professional.
“No.
No, no, no, no, no.
I can’t do it.
You should do it.
You’re a teacher.”
Like Jack’s secret poem, this short entry is yet another example of how the story’s one-sided conversation creates suspense. Jack’s repeated “no” tells readers that his teacher made an important request; this mystery engages readers’ attention as they think of possible scenarios the young poet might be responding to. Readers must turn the page to Jack’s next entry before he provides context.
“So what I am asking you
is this:
If you ever get time
to leave your house
and if you ever feel
like visiting a school
where there might be some kids
who like your poems
would you ever maybe
think about maybe
coming
maybe
to our school
which is a clean place
with mostly nice
people in it
and I think our teacher
Miss Stretchberry
would maybe even
make brownies for you
because she sometimes
makes them for us.”
Jack does his best to sell a hypothetical scenario—Myers visiting his class—hoping that he might meet his favorite poet, his new hero. Jack recognizes the many moving pieces that must fall into place for his dream to come true, this willingness to hope being a brave act in itself. Jack’s pitch is childlike but earnest as he appeals to Myers with his school’s cleanliness, its “mostly nice people,” and his teacher’s brownies. His argument’s simplicity endears readers, and likely Myers, to his dream.
“and I understand
if you can’t come
to our clean school
and read some of your poems
to us
and let us see your face
which I bet
is a friendly face.
My name is Jack.
Bye, Mr. Walter Dean Myers.”
At the end of Jack’s long letter to Myers—which is also one of the book’s longer journal entries—he finally introduces himself, creating a reverse structure that reflects the kind of excitement and forgetfulness endemic to young protagonists. Jack also emphasizes his age by always referring to Myers as “Mr. Walter Dean Myers,” a long but respectful way to show his admiration.
“maybe he’s away
maybe he’s on vacation
maybe he’s sick
maybe he’s hiding in a room
writing poems
maybe he’s baby-sitting
his children or his grandchildren
(if he’s married and stuff)
or maybe he has to go
to the dentist
or get that car fixed
or maybe someone died
(I really really really hope
someone did not die)”
Upon learning that Myers might not respond for a while (if at all), Jack quells his nagging hope by brainstorming reasons why the poet wouldn’t be able to visit. Jack starts rambling, his use of “maybe,” “or,” and parentheticals emphasizing his tumbling train of thought. The parentheses paired with Jack’s lack of other punctuation supplements this entry’s rambling effect.
“I didn’t know about
the spell-checking thing
inside the computer.
It is like a miracle
little brain
in there
a little helper brain.”
Jack utilizes simile to portray his first experience with a computer’s word processor. The simile compares the computer to “a miracle / little brain,” ethereal and oddly human in tandem. Even as Jack takes a step toward authorial independence, he finds comfort in technology’s unexpected help and guidance.
“blue car blue car
splattered with mud
hit Sky
thud thud thud
and kept on going
in such a hurry
so fast
so many miles to go
it couldn’t even stop
and
Sky
was just there
in the road
lying on his side
with his legs bent funny
and his side heaving
and he looked up at me
and I said
‘Sky! Sky! Sky!’
and then my dad
was there
and he lifted Sky
out of the road
and laid him on the grass
and
Sky
closed his eyes
and
he
never
opened
them
again
ever.”
Sky’s story encompasses the book’s most detailed plot as Jack spends most of his time reflecting on poetry as it relates to his dog and Myers. Processing poetry often requires some abstraction—like when readers experience Myers’s visit before and after the fact rather than experiencing it first-hand. Sky’s fate, which exists only in the past and can believably exist in the book’s journal format, incorporates a plot-driven storyline that helps balance Jack’s introspective thoughts.
“And the bookcase
looks like it’s
sprouting books
all of them by
Mr. Walter Dean Myers
lined up
looking back at us
waiting for
Mr. Walter Dean Myers
himself
to come
to our school
right into our classroom.”
Jack personifies the classroom’s library to emphasize his own expectant, hopeful attitude. Personification is a literary device that projects human traits onto inanimate objects. In this stanza, the books look back at Jack and wait for Myers alongside the eager protagonist.
“We hope we didn’t ask you
too many questions
but we thank you
for answering every which one
and especially for saying
that you would be
flattered
if someone used
some of your words
and especially if they
added a note that
they were
inspired by
Walter Dean Myers.”
Jack may not understand the implications of his own observation, but Miss Stretchberry likely discussed Jack’s concern with Myers before the visit—with the poet agreeing to grant the students permission to use his work. Miss Stretchberry’s likely intervention—and overall presence—demonstrates how much she cares for her students, Jack’s reaction showing the positive impact such actions (and Myers’s) can have on young writers.
By Sharon Creech