A piebald cat finds a new home.
To a clipped text, a little white cat with black and orange splotches cheerfully scampers through New York City. It scrambles around walking human legs in a “crowded city,” and the “speedy kitty” zips through parks and across busy streets, a dotted yellow line marking its path. The city is “noisy” and “scary,” but the kitty is “brave,” yowling at a pack of dogs from atop Patience the library lion. In that and other instances, the kitty does fine, eating a bowl of fish and performing with a jazz band, but the “cold kitty” in the “snowy city” befriends a White family that takes it home. Miller’s bold, blocky, simple illustrations effectively show an expressive and adorable cat that isn’t exactly lost but clearly wants to be found. Children might wonder where the kitty came from and why it doesn’t already have a family, which opens up opportunities for creative thinking and conversation with young readers. The clever structure, a story told entirely through two-word phrases composed of adjectives and then the nouns “kitty” and “city,” makes for a hypnotic, satisfying read-aloud experience, though the order changes after the first two pages, the only time the kitty precedes the city.
A cozy story for cat lovers and anyone looking for a happy ending.
(Picture book. 3-7)