cover image They Call Me No Sam!

They Call Me No Sam!

Drew Daywalt, illus. by Mike Lowery. Clarion, $15.99 (224p) ISBN 978-0-3586-1-2902

According to Sam the pug, his human owner, 196-year-old Mike (“in naked-monkey-thing years that’s only twenty-eight”), fails to use his hands for their intended purpose, including “petting, scratching behind ears, and opening bags of food.” Though Mike “was fine at opening the food bag most of the time,” Sam tires of his owner’s ineptitude and runs away. After ending up in “jail” (the local shelter), he’s adopted by adolescent Justin Peterson and his scientist parents. Having recently moved, the adult Petersons hope that Sam will help Justin—who often smells like loneliness or longing, per Sam—adjust to his new home. Unfortunately, Sam doesn’t understand why Justin takes him outside so often, or why he gets scolded for defending the home against people like Phoebe, Justin’s classmate, whom Sam believes to be an evil wizard who can enchant people via “magic wand” (a laser pointer). Sam’s diary entries—written in arch first-pooch prose by Daywalt (The Wrong Book) and accompanied by slapstick b&w comics and spot illustrations by Lowery (Pizza Shark)—craft a humorously tender look at the daily life of a pup whose bark is worse than his bite, but whose determination to protect and love his family is fiercer than any threat. Human character skin tones match the white of the page. Ages 8–12. (June)