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Book cover of Curious Catwalk
Cats & Cat Family, Poetry - General & Miscellaneous, Poetry - Rhymes, Nursery Rhymes & Fingerplays, Poetry - General & Miscellaneous, Poetry - Animals

Curious Catwalk

by John Gravdahl
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Synopsis

Nosy the cat takes a quiet morning stroll which evolves into a full day of adventure and observation and ultimately makes for an unusual day.

Publishers Weekly

In a series of 10 haiku, Gravdahl (The Tale of Dog Giovanni) follows an inquisitive black feline (named Nosy, according to her food bowl) as she chases a butterfly and other flying creatures along a Golden Gate-like suspension bridge. Dodging painters and maintenance workers, the cat scrambles across cables and up towers, occasionally stopping to savor the commanding views of the bay. Rendered in creamy pencils and gouache, Gravdahl's framed, mostly single-page illustrations possess the dynamism and strong graphic feel of WPA murals. He distills Nosy down to an aerodynamic sleekness-underscored by a neon-blue outline-but in her crouching and stretching, and in the way her ardent eyes follow her prey, Gravdahl proves he's a keen student of real cat behavior. The haiku doesn't quite measure up to the pictures, but it's serviceable in narrative terms. Still, children will enjoy the syllabic computation that goes into these poetic snapshots, and when Gravdahl hits the mark, he's good fun: "Watch out and look up,/ stripes and lights bring a warning./ Flat cats are no fun!" appears opposite a steamroller. Close observers will detect that Nosy lives on a boat, and her captain-owner doubles as a bridge worker. A visual treat. Ages 4-10. (Jan.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

In a series of 10 haiku, Gravdahl (The Tale of Dog Giovanni) follows an inquisitive black feline (named Nosy, according to her food bowl) as she chases a butterfly and other flying creatures along a Golden Gate-like suspension bridge. Dodging painters and maintenance workers, the cat scrambles across cables and up towers, occasionally stopping to savor the commanding views of the bay. Rendered in creamy pencils and gouache, Gravdahl's framed, mostly single-page illustrations possess the dynamism and strong graphic feel of WPA murals. He distills Nosy down to an aerodynamic sleekness-underscored by a neon-blue outline-but in her crouching and stretching, and in the way her ardent eyes follow her prey, Gravdahl proves he's a keen student of real cat behavior. The haiku doesn't quite measure up to the pictures, but it's serviceable in narrative terms. Still, children will enjoy the syllabic computation that goes into these poetic snapshots, and when Gravdahl hits the mark, he's good fun: "Watch out and look up,/ stripes and lights bring a warning./ Flat cats are no fun!" appears opposite a steamroller. Close observers will detect that Nosy lives on a boat, and her captain-owner doubles as a bridge worker. A visual treat. Ages 4-10. (Jan.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

School Library Journal

PreS-Gr 2-Pale, stylized graphics, done in watercolor pencil and gouache, illustrate this adventure of a black cat that leaves the boat he lives on to chase a butterfly onto a high bridge. The artwork requires close scrutiny to determine what is going on, and the text, written in haiku, is equally bland-"Purple night sets in/and sudden sights turn silly./Time to hurry on./Now, warm lights await./Stepping down, up and over,/this walk circles-/Home." Haiku as a controlled form can perfectly capture a moment in time. However, unlike J. Patrick Lewis's verses in Black Swan, White Crow (Atheneum, 1995) or those of Issa in Matthew Gollub's Cool Melons-Turn to Frogs (Lee & Low, 1998), Gravdahl's efforts do not. Readers looking for haiku can find far better practitioners; those looking for adventurous black cats should stick with the exploits of Lynley Dodd's Slinky Malinki (Gareth Stevens, 1991; o.p.) or Christopher Myers's Black Cat (Scholastic, 1999).-Kathleen Whalin, York Public Library, ME Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
January 1, 2003
Publisher
Propeller Press
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780967857787

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