by Chris Raschka (Author) Chris Raschka (Illustrator)
Two-time Caldecott Medal winner Chris Raschka celebrates the enduring bond between best friends--a young girl and her cat.
Meow is an innovative and surprising tale of friendship, love, anger, hurt, kindness, and forgiveness. A must-have for the youngest reader and cat lovers everywhere.
A girl and her cat, Marigold, are best friends. When the girl accidentally steps on Marigold's tail, the surprised and hurt cat runs for cover. But after some time apart and an apology, all is forgiven, and Marigold and the girl are friends again.
Two-time Caldecott Medal winner Chris Raschka introduces various renditions of the word "meow" throughout, each offering a collaborative, educational, and innovative way to interpret the story. With two compelling main characters, an entire rainbow of emotions, a playful text composed almost exclusively using only four letters (M E O W), and lively illustrations, Meow is ideal for visual literacy, beginning readers, very young children, social and emotional development, and for classroom story hours.
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Raschka (The Blue Table) chronicles a search for intimacy from a cat's point of view. In his distinctive watercolor style, he sculpts the feline's furry contours in buttery gold, giving it green eyes, nodding whiskers, and huge paws. The cat sighs happily as a hand reaches down to ruffle its fur, then the attention ends as a red shoe walks away. "Meow?" the cat inquires, in the first of a string of utterances that vary the titular phrase. In an attempt to win back human attention, the cat leaps onto a table where a brown-skinned child is writing, landing squarely in the middle of the paper before being tossed back on the floor. Later, it's the cat's turn to take offense ("mm eee eee ow!") as the child treads on its tail by accident; subsequent reconciliation takes time. These home-movie moments entertain, but there's deeper significance, too, in the way they echo individuals' attention-seeking and -avoiding behaviors in fits and starts. The delicate balancing act between loving, wanting to be loved, and yearning for independence resolves in a tender rom-com ending between child and cat. Ages 4-8. Agent: Brenda Bowen, Book Group. (May)
Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.PreS-Gr 3--There are many ways to say "Hello," and "Meow" is one of them, but then, "Meow" has many meanings. Marigold is an irresistible ginger cat with a spotted belly, green eyes, and downy cream paws. She has a special bond with a little girl with brown skin and black hair puffs. When she jumps up on the writing table with a "Meow," the girl promptly places Marigold back on the ground. Walking around the corner, Marigold pounces on a ray of sunshine and finds it is a great place for sunbathing. Soon her cat nap is disturbed--"Mm-eee-eee-ow!"--when the little girl accidentally steps on her tail. Like a cat on hot bricks, Marigold runs off and hides under a bed. The little girl sweetly says she is sorry and earns Marigold's forgiveness. Raschka (A Ball for Daisy) arranges the action in graphic novel sequences with moment-to-moment panels and spreads that create smooth transitions between the poignant scenes. The loose watercolor illustrations provide visual cues to the meaning of the floating text that depicts meow sounds varying in length and signifying friendship, hurt, forgiveness, and love. VERDICT Expressive and engaging, this picture book is the cat's meow. A warm portrayal of kids and furry friends that introduces young children to phonics, emotions, and active listening.--Rita Baguio Christensen
Copyright 2022 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.