by Alice Provensen (Author)
A never-before-published original work from renowned children's book duo Alice and Martin Provensen, which invites into the mystery that is Max the cat!
An affectionate portrait of a pet who's both friend and hunter, from a luminary author-illustrator pair of American children's literature. Taking inspiration from their own life at Maple Hill Farm in Dutchess County, New York, great American illustrators Alice and Martin Provensen shared the changing seasons that give rhythm to life in the country in A Year at Maple Hill Farm and the lovable antics of their barnyard animals in Our Animal Friends at Maple Hill Farm. This picture book will include backmatter from Karen Provensen, with more information of Max, the real-life cat who lived on Maple Hill Farm, and her parents' lasting legacy.
A Publishers Weekly 2023 Summer Read, with starred reviews from Kirkus and PW! In this picture book from the Provensens' archives, the unforgettable Max, who appears in many of the Provensens' picture books, takes center stage. Wherever Max goes, mischief is sure to follow! He spends his days teasing, playing hide-and-seek, and prowling the barnyard. He's also keenly intelligent and independent, with his own private life that begins at night.
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Gr 1-4—Readers who have had a cat, or know a cat, or tried to befriend a cat, probably know that cats are complicated. This book doesn't shy away from that, but embraces the complexity of cats: They can be hunters and friends, messy and clean, dangerous and kind. Illustrated linework, with watercolors painted in warm tones, makes the book feel like a loving and honest story rather than a scary or cute one. The text is set in a handwritten style, which may prove tough for some early readers to decipher, but it does make the book look more like a diary written and illustrated by a real person, adding, perhaps, to the "truth" message the story aims for. This is a good fit for rural libraries, too, where young readers might be familiar with the truth about farm cats, showcasing for them how their everyday world can be beautiful—even if it's kind of messy, like Max. VERDICT A book for any collection where the Provensens are popular, or where "taken-from-real-life" snapshots do well.—Jessica Schriver
Copyright 2023 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.Fans of the late Caldecott-winning couple's work will be delighted to encounter this never-before-published gem of a story about a rambunctious tabby cat named Max. A kind of sidebar to Our Animal Friends at Maple Hill Farm, in which Max appears, it's told in a similar style, via an informal narrative that builds on thin-lined ink drawings lightly washed in watercolor. Though Max's youth involves no littermates, vignettes of the kitten tussling with a bag of sugar, a spool of red ribbon, and crockery accompany text that indicates "he was/ as much/ trouble// as/ ten/ kittens./ And he was always hungry." Distinctive, curlicue hand-lettering on cream-colored pages enhances the story's sketchbook feel as the creators follow Max's maturation into a "terrible tease" of other animals, a "mighty hunter" ("Max has his own room and bed.// It is full of squirrel tails"), and a being with "an important tail" that reveals his mood. After examining Max's relationships with the farm's other animals and its pale-skinned human inhabitants, the story ends with a glimpse of Max taking off solo into a lonely, moonlit night where "his real life begins"--an acknowledgment that even closely observed creatures have their own secrets. A letter to readers from the Provensens' daughter concludes. Ages 3-8. (May)
Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.Alice and Martin Provensen were an American husband-and-wife team of artists and illustrators. Together, they illustrated over 40 children's books, 19 of which they also wrote and edited. Beloved illustrators, they won a Caldecott for The Glorious Flight and a Caldecott Honor for A Visit to William Blake's Inn, and eight of their books were selected by the New York Times as Best Illustrated Books of the Year. For many years, they lived at Maple Hill Farm in Dutchess County, New York, which they immortalized in picture books A Year at Maple Hill Farm and Our Animal Friends.