Well, no, not really. He's just pink. I suppose this penguin could be gay, but the book doesn't go there. Too bad.
Anyway, in What's a Penguin to Think When He Wakes Up Pink, sweet little penguin Patrick wakes up a new and interesting color. His friends tease him, so he runs away to Africa to meet pink flamingos. Due to him being a short-legged and flightless penguin, he doesn't fit in well with the flamingos. So Patrick swims home again, only to find that his friends all think he is awesome now because he went all the way to Africa and met flamingos.
It's a heartwarming story about how it can be both challenging and neat to be different, and about how boys shouldn't fear the color pink. I would classify it as too uncontroversial for my collection of dangerous books, but I actually did once overhear a parent at a daycare scold their son not to play with the tea set. I'm sure that such a parent would disapprove of Lynne Rickards' sweet pink penguin tale, so for them, I add Pink to my library.
Being as this is a picture book about a homosexual relationship, And Tango Makes Three, by Justin Richardson and Peter Parnell, was the most challenged book of 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2010. It was the second most challenged book of 2009.
I read this to my four-year-old. His only point of confusion: "what's a penguin house, mommy? I thought they lived in a nest. Where is the house?"
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