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Hardcover Calabash Cat and His Amazing Journey Book

ISBN: 0618224238

ISBN13: 9780618224234

Calabash Cat and His Amazing Journey

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Calabash Cat, a West African cat, sets out one day to find where the world ends.His adventures take him across a desert, grasslands, a jungle, and the ocean, until he finds what he is looking... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Cats

This is a great book for cat lovers, or animal lovers. Author of "Hobo Finds A Home"

a good adventure story for young and old

First, the art is beautiful and engaging. The bold lines and beautiful patterns within the animals are unique for children's books and very interesting to look at. Next, the story is very good. Like many good children's stories, this adventure of a cat can be both interesting and meaningful on the surface, for a young audience, as well as providing a deeper message for us adults most likely reading the story to children. Grown ups, I ask you after reading this book, "What boundaries have you set to make the perimeter of your world?" Last but certainly not least, without being preachy or disgustingly PC, this book introduces a vital multicultural element. The art is inspired by art which the author/illustrator experienced in the country of Chad AND the text of this story is written in English and Arabic.

A calabashian feline extraordinaire

Prior to reading this book, if you had walked up to me and said, "List everything you know about the country of Chad" I could have come up with perhaps four facts. 1: It is in Africa. 2: The word Chad contains four letters. 3: If you spell it backwards "Chad" becomes "dahC". 4: A Chad in and of itself is no particular danger, but a hanging Chad might well throw a country into chaos. As you can see, my Chadian knowledge was lacking. Then I picked up "Calabash Cat and His Amazing Journey". This title had intrigued me for a couple reasons. For one thing, it was visually stunning. I'm a sucker for intricate linework, and "Calabash Cat" is awash in tiny details and clever little strokes of the pen. Also, I had heard that this tale was written in both English and Arabic. I am currently under the impression that there is a distinct lack of good Arabic books out there for kids in America to read. To my mind, a book like "Calabash Cat" might well fill a few gaps. So I picked it up for a look-see. In this fable, we meet a calabash cat. One day, the cat decides to see exactly where the world ends. It stops at a desert and decides that this might well be the world's end. That is, until a camel informs the cat that this is not the world's end and that he will take the feline to the REAL end of the world. They travel to a grassland and the cat is just about to declare it the world's end when a horse informs him that he is mistaken. With that, the cat is on the back of the horse going to the REAL end of the world. From there the cat rides the back of a tiger through a jungle, the back of a whale through the ocean, and finally upon the back of an eagle. The eagle, wisest of all the creatures yet, simply says, "Climb up on my back and I will show you a world without end". Before returning to his home, the cat flies high above the land and we are treated to a magnificent two page spread of animals frolicking on the earth as cat and bird fly silhouetted against a geometric sun. On the final page of this book, author James Rumford explains that he once bought a carved calabash gourd in the shape of a cat. Looking at the creature, Rumford couldn't help but wonder what other calabash animals his cat might meet and where they might go. Thus, the calabash cat's tale was born. The story contains a classic folktale quest, in this case the search for the farthest end of the world. Rumford has a good ear for repetition and tone. I'm not fluent in Chadian Arabic (no surprises there) so I can't vouch that the words in that language flow as well as they do in the English. Needless to say, it nice that they're there at all. The illustrations in this story are modeled on the style of Chad's calabash engravers. The cat, for his part, has a large lizard and fish bedecking his body. In fact, each animal that comes with contact with our intrepid hero is illustrated in a similar manner. Against a brown mottled background, these animals are a be

A classic: simple story w/unique illustrations & good moral

Calabash Cat starts in his African home and takes off on a walk to see where the world ends. Thinking maybe it ended at the start of the desert, he sits down. A camel happens by and notes how silly the cat is and says, "Climb up on my back, and I will show you where the world ends," and they walk across the desert. At the end of the desert and beginning of the grasslands, the camel says authoritatively, "Here, my friend, is where the world ends." However a horse happens by to let the cat know that the camel was small-minded to think it ended at the desert. And thus goes several iterations with the horse across the grasslands, the tiger through the jungle, the whale across the sea. The eagle teaches the final moral that the world is without end. My toddler loves the intricate African animal pictures, and I hope that over time he will absorb the lesson that people often only "know" what they've seen and that he should always seek to expand his horizons.
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