Everyone’s cat has talent, but ballet?
A bespectacled, light-skinned child and several other kids share their feline friends’ hidden talents. “Christian says his cat climbs up the bedroom curtains.” Maria’s can slide down the banister. Misty’s knows how to work the kitchen faucet. “That’s all cool,” the young narrator says, “But my cat does ballet!" Grands jetés, glissades, tours en l’air—he does it all! The other children (except poor Hilary, who has only a dog to brag about) keep going on about their cats’ talents. Margot’s pilfers stuffed toys. Misha’s rides the vacuum. That’s all well and good, the narrator goes on, but…ballet! Don’t the other kids believe the narrator? Are they jealous? The narrator invites the children (and their cats) over for ballet lessons. Everyone takes first position as the music begins. They let the cats go, and all the cats perform ballet—except the narrator’s…who takes a nap. Heidbreder’s simple text intersperses the names of various ballet moves, artfully demonstrated by the puss in question in rose-colored spotlights. Relying on a limited palette, Schu’s delightfully whimsical illustrations are cartoonish but realistic, a perfect match for the story. The members of the racially diverse child cast are all named after famous dancers who get paragraph-long biographies at the close, followed by a description of each ballet move.
A fine, feline-centric introduction to the dance.
(Picture book. 4-8)