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Green Cat by Dayal Kaur Khalsa β€” book cover
Children's Fiction, Concepts

Green Cat

by Dayal Kaur Khalsa
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Synopsis

Having to share a room with a brother or sister can make for hard feelings, and the siblings in this hilarious book are grumpy about their crowded room. At least it seems crowded until Green Cat shows up. He’s going to show us what a really crowded room can look like. By the time he piles in everything from a toaster to a giraffe, the amazed siblings are ready to admit that sharing a room is not so bad after all.

Publishers Weekly

In this posthumous publication from Khalsa (The Snow Cat), a giant green cat takes the role traditionally played by a rabbi in the classic folktale of a family that complains of too little space. Here, two siblings say their room is "too small. `I want more space!' each one would shout, And try to toss the other out, into the drafty hall." Every page, save the penultimate, affords the same symmetrical view of a squarish bedroom, a central doorway and twin beds placed foot-to-foot. Green Cat, a teddy-bearish, Gumby-colored fellow, changes their minds. Bit by bit, the cat delivers nonsense items like "A rowboat, a rainbow, A little red calf, Then, just for a laugh, He brought a giraffe." According to the text, the place fills to capacity and gives the children a renewed appreciation for breathing room. But in the pictures, the elevated vantage point and Lilliputian characters (the cat is about an inch tall, the children even smaller) create an illusion of airiness, despite the cacophony of colors. Soupy-green backgrounds dominate the tiny white print and lend a leaden heaviness to the endeavor. Unfortunately, the static layout and undersize artwork nullify any liveliness in this tale. Ages 5-8. (Apr.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

About the Author, Dayal Kaur Khalsa

Dayal Kaur Khalsa was born in Queens, New York. She traveled for many years before settling in Canada, where she wrote and illustrated stories about her childhood: her love for her gambling grandmother, her desire for a pet dog, and the wonderful day she discovered a new food, pizza. Dayal Kaur Khalsa died in 1989.

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Book Details

Published
February 1, 2002
Publisher
Tundra
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780887765865

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