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CAT'S VERY GOOD DAY by Kristen Tracy

CAT'S VERY GOOD DAY

by Kristen Tracy ; illustrated by David Small

Pub Date: April 4th, 2023
ISBN: 978-1-984815-20-0
Publisher: Putnam

With whimsical wordplay, Tracy and Small chronicle a day in the life of a feline.

Most of the sentences in this story are sentence fragments. Nouns are turned into adjectives, and verbs are turned into nouns. A two-page sequence describes the cat in lines that nearly rhyme: “Sock-drawer slinker. / Keyboard tinkerer.” The cat is often seen committing acts of destruction, like flinging a teacup across the room. But Small’s drawings make the animal impossible to dislike. Its eyes never once have the same expression. Sometimes the cat catches its own image in the mirror, with a look of alarm. Sometimes the pupil creeps to the very edge of the eye, as though the cat is planning something devious and joyful. From time to time, the story is interrupted by a sort of refrain as the narrator reflects on what kind of day the cat is having. Just after the cat shreds a sofa, for example, the text reads, “What a happy day.” The line is both ironic and true, and it’s accompanied by a picture of one of the owners throwing the cat out of the house. The cat’s family presents as Asian. A teacher might have difficulty explaining the parts of speech on a particular page, but the book is easy to sum up: This is a poem. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

The only explanation anyone needs for why people love cats or hate them.

(Picture book. 3-5)