Cat Dog

Mem Fox, 1946-

Book - 2021

"A call-and-response-style adventure in which a cat and dog are astonished to find a mouse in their house! The three circle each other while the story sometimes correctly describes their antics-and sometimes doesn't"--

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jE/Fox
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Children's Room Show me where

jE/Fox
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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
New York : Beach Lane Books [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Mem Fox, 1946- (author)
Other Authors
Mark Teague (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
Audience
Ages 4-8.
Grades 2-3.
ISBN
9781416986881
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

"So there was a scary dog, right?" [page turn] "No!" "But there was a cat, right?" [page turn] "Yes!" The dog and cat are on the sofa when the mouse appears. The dog may or may not have noticed. A short chase ensues, straight to the mousehole. In a memorable scene depicted from the mouse's point of view behind the baseboard, the looming faces of both the cat and the dog stare intently forward. Last page reads, "And then the mouse came out to say hi, right?" [page turn] "Hmmm, what do you think?" The book's originality arises from the ever-shifting interplay of narration and illustration. Is one unreliable, or are both? What really happened? The plot may be as hard to pin down as Schrodinger's cat, but that won't stop the fun when kids shout out "Yes" or "No" in response to each question, then wait for the answer to be revealed. Together, Fox's irresistible, conversational text and Teague's wonderfully deadpan acrylic paintings create an original picture book with great storytime potential.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A game of cat, dog, and mouse proves itself a meta tale in the works in this wry and original picture book. "So there was a scary dog, right?" begins Fox (Early One Morning); the text appears on the recto as an orange tabby peers over a sofa, where a beefy white dog sits snarling in a studded collar. A page turn later, a more decisive voice emerges on the verso--"No!"--resulting in a change of direction: now, a gentler, surprised-looking hound benignly eyes its back foot. As the animals engage in a classic pet-versus-mouse encounter, an assurance-seeking storytelling phrase on one page ("And the dog leapt off the couch, right?") is followed by an affirming or refuting rejoinder on the next ("No!")--and an attendant visual turnabout (the hound leaping is now shown snoozing on its back). Teague (Felipe and Claudette) contributes substantial, painterly acrylics that vary acrobatically from scene to scene until the two voices take a collaborative turn. With variations that unfurl in the style of David Ives's Sure Thing, it's a giddy, cleverly imagined rhetorical dance that promises to leave audiences' heads spinning. Ages 4--8. (Sept.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A cat and a dog's lazy day on the couch is interrupted by the appearance of a bold mouse. What actually happens is related through a series of questions to which the cat responds, correcting certain assumptions that did not occur. The possible scenarios are depicted in the fully expressive acrylic paintings integral to the imaginative (though sometimes incorrect) narrative, as one version is outlined within the questions and then the correct perspective is presented. "So there was a scary dog, right?" Here readers see an orange cat with eyes wide open partially hiding behind the couch where a large white dog is sitting wearing a spiked collar and with an angry, alert expression on its face. "No!" is the response, and the dog is revealed to be mild-mannered and plain-collared. "But there was a cat, right?" Both dog and cat look utterly astonished. "Yes" is the response. "And the dog was wide awake, right?" The dog, sitting upright, is pondering the situation while the cat snoozes. "No!" is the response. "But the cat saw a mouse, right?" This exchange continues until the story's tangible outcome is eventually told. Fox's intriguing call-and-response storytelling approach allows readers to surmise what might have happened against what really took place. The mouse is chased into a hole, and Fox gives kids another opportunity to continue the story. "And then the mouse came out to say hi, right?" The mouse stands before a bewildered dog and cat holding a violin and bow. "Hmmm, what do you think?" (This book was reviewed digitally.) The clever supposition will keep kids imagining the amusing possibilities of one common story. (Picture book. 3-6) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.