Lizard Music by Daniel Manus Pinkwater
Trade Paperback. An old, weird favorite kids' book! The first time I read this as a kid, I was like... "What just happened?! What did I just read?!!" and for years I thought I'd imagined it. But it does exist, and NYRB was kind enough to reprint it for a whole new audience!
An ALA Notable Book
Kids ages 9-12 will "delight in [the] oddness" of this Home Alone-style tale set in the 1970s--from a prolific children's author who captures "a magic that's not like anyone else's" (Neil Gaiman).
With Victor's parents out of town, he is free to investigate the mysterious lizard musicians who have recently appeared on TV . . .
Things Victor loves: pizza with anchovies, grape soda, B movies aired at midnight, the evening news. And with his parents off at a resort and his older sister shirking her babysitting duties, Victor has plenty of time to indulge himself and to try a few things he's been curious about. Exploring the nearby city of Hogboro, he runs into a curious character known as the Chicken Man (a reference to his companion, an intelligent hen named Claudia who lives under his hat).
The Chicken Man speaks brilliant nonsense, but he seems to be hip to the lizard musicians (real lizards, not men in lizard suits) who've begun appearing on Victor's television after the broadcast of the late-late movie. Are the lizards from outer space? From "other space"? Together Victor and the Chicken Man, guided by the able Claudia, journey to the lizards' floating island, a strange and fantastic place that operates with an inspired logic of its own.