Day of the Iguana explained

Day of the Iguana
Author:Henry Winkler and Lin Oliver
Illustrator:Carol Heyer
Country:United States
Language:English
Series:Hank Zipzer
Genre:Children's novel
Publisher:Grosset & Dunlap
Release Date:2003
Media Type:Print (Paperback)
Isbn:0-448-43212-9
Preceded By:I Got a "D" in Salami
Followed By:The Zippity Zinger

Day of the Iguana is the third book in the Hank Zipzer series by Henry Winkler and Lin Oliver. The title is a reference to The Night of the Iguana, a play by Tennessee Williams.[1]

Plot summary

Hank and his two best friends, Frankie and Ashley, perform magic tricks at Hank's 3-year-old cousin's birthday party. Performing at the party means that Frankie will have to miss The Mutant Moth That Ate Toledo, a movie he has been looking forward to, but Hank promises to record the movie for him. However, since Hank has dyslexia, he accidentally records the wrong channel, making Frankie very upset.

Hank takes apart a cable box to see how it works for his school science project, but then his sister's pet iguana, Katherine, lays eggs in it. Afraid that his father will discover the cable box taken apart, Hank orders a new one. Tom, the new cable box installer, happens to be knowledgeable about iguanas. That night they witness 23 baby iguanas hatching. Tom agrees to give Hank a tape of The Mutant Moth That Ate Toledo in exchange for a baby iguana, and Hank and Frankie watch the movie together.

Characters

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Day of the Iguana. 2021-10-10. Publishers Weekly.