Product Details
Mrs. McTats and Her Houseful of Cats

Mrs. McTats and Her Houseful of Cats
By Alyssa Satin Capucilli

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Average customer review:
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Product Description

Mrs. McTats and her cat, Abner, are living happily together when some new cats come scratching at Mrs. McTats's door. By twos and threes, and then fours and more, the cats come, welcomed by Mrs. McTats (though Abner's not so sure about it all!). Just when it seems the house is full to bursting, the cats stop coming. Whew! So many cats! But Mrs. McTats can't help feeling that something -- or someone -- is missing. Then there's one more scratch at the door -- and Mrs. McTats finds just what the family needs to be complete.

Alyssa Capucilli's playful rhymes, which surprise with an alphabetic twist, combine with Joan Rankin's hilarious illustrations, which give each cat a distinct personality, to guarantee hours of reading pleasure.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1912008 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-05
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: School & Library Binding
  • 32 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Amazon.com
"In a small, cozy cottage lived Mrs. McTats. She lived all alone, except for one cat." This is only true for a page or two. In time, more and more cats scratch on her door, and somehow, every time, she seems to find room for them. "'Come in, my sweet dears,' said Mrs. McTats. 'I'm sure I've got room for just two more cats. I'll call you Basil, and Curly you'll be. I only had one cat, but now I have three!'" She names them in alphabetical order, from her original, Abner, to the final arrival, number 26--named Zoom. Joan Rankin's endearing illustrations of all the new four-legged family members--along with Mrs. McTats's easy hospitality--will charm the socks off your youngsters so much they won't realize it's an alphabet and counting book combined! (Ages 3 to 7) --Karin Snelson

From Publishers Weekly
Capucilli (the Biscuit books) and Rankin (Wow! It's Great Being a Duck) create a picture of cozy domesticity while incorporating a subtle lesson in letters and numbers. Mrs. McTats and her cat, Abner, lead a quiet life until the day two bewhiskered strangers turn up on their doorstep. The heroine doesn't hesitate. " `Come in, my sweet dears,'/ said Mrs. McTats./ `I'm sure I've got room/ for just two more cats." Thus Basil and Curly join the household. Three more show up the next day, then four, until the furry family extends to Pip, Quip and Rosebud on through Winnie, Xinnie and Yodel. Yet this abecedary tale leaves room for one final surprise; as Mrs. McTats puzzles over a feeling that "something was missing," she opens the door to greet not a cat, but a puppy named Zoom. With just the merest hint of pastel shades in her watercolors, Rankin artfully blurs the edges of characters and surroundings alike into softly rounded shapes. She dresses the pages with oval shrubbery, round rugs, overstuffed cushions and, most notably, the beaming, unflappable Mrs. McTats herself, as plump as her fetching, well-fed pets. Other comic touches include Abner hilariously mimicking his mistress's every expression and pose, and the faces in an heirloom portrait, which shift from surprise to bafflement to downright disapproval at the ever-expanding residents of the snugly appointed cottage. Ages 3-7.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal
reS-Gr 1-Cheerful and comfortable-looking Mrs. McTats sets off to market to buy food for her cat, Abner, and returns to find two more cats scratching at her door. After welcoming Basil and Curly, more felines just keep on coming, in alphabetical order, until the arrival of the 26th, which turns out to be a puppy, Zoom, making for a surprise ending. The tale is recounted in a somewhat forced rhyme: "The very next day, off went Mrs. McTats. `What can I possibly feed fifteen cats?'" Fortunately, the whimsical art is more successful at depicting the playful proceedings. Whether depicting Pip, Quip, Rosebud, or Sally, the delicately toned watercolor illustrations use just the right balance of line and color to capture the personality and expression of the animals.

Caroline Ward, The Ferguson Library, Stamford, CT

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.