I imagine that most cat owners have entertained the thought that they
have a bad kitty. After all, cats have an independent attitude and a
knack for getting into mischief, and the holidays often bring out the
worst in them since there are so many opportunities to cause trouble.
That is certainly the case in Nick Bruel’s A Bad Kitty Christmas, one of several books featuring a scraggly black car with a tuft of white fur on her chest and a sometimes-surly disposition.
This charming story is told through rhyme. It begins and ends as a parody of A Visit From St. Nicholas,
but it’s a much longer narrative than that classic poem, and Santa
Claus isn’t involved at all. Instead, this is the story of a mischievous
kitty who makes a colossal mess, gets soundly scolded and decides to
run away en route to the big family dinner. Along the way, she comes to
realize how nice it is to have a home, even if people can be frustrating
sometimes.
One very neat thing about this book is that it is
an alphabet book, but instead of going through the alphabet once, as
most books of that type do, it does so several times, and it is
integrated organically into the story. The first time around, we get an
alphabetical list of all the damage Kitty has done to the house, with
one noun and one passive past tense verb in each short sentence. Each
time the sentence’s star letter is used at the beginning of a word, it
is in red and extra-large.
The second time, the featured
letter is blue, and instead of a sentence per letter, it’s only a word
or phrase, so this alphabet only takes up two pages. It lists all of the
animals the ravenous Kitty wants to eat, and some of them are quite
unusual, so there is an educational element to this one beyond the
alphabet as children can learn about such creatures as cormorants,
ibises, narwhals and quetzals. The two-page spread also features six
amusing illustrations grouping the animals, so kids can have an instant
idea of what they look like.
Finally, the third alphabet is a
listing of various people appearing in photographs hanging on the
Christmas tree of an elderly woman who finds Kitty after she runs away.
While the first alphabet is funny and the second is educational, this
third is poignant as it shows all of the people important in the woman’s
life and helps Kitty to understand how much these bonds matter. There
are also interesting little tidbits in there, such as the fact that
“vriend” is the Afrikaans word for “friend.”
Another fun
element of this book is the fact that shortly after Kitty runs away, the
pup who lives with her also hops out of the car in order to conduct a
search. After that point, many of the pages have a black-and-white inset
showing how he is progressing on his journey as he sniffs her trail out
and makes inquiries of any creature he sees. The main illustrations, by
contrast, are vibrantly colored and sometimes presented in several
panels per page. This is a very busy book, filled with a bustle of
activity and sometimes several things happening at once. It’s also
ultimately a very sweet book with a heartwarming conclusion that is
likely to elicit as many smiles among parents as children.
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