local_shipping   Free Standard U.S. Shipping on all orders $25 or more

  • Cat Heaven

Cat Heaven

Illustrator
Cynthia Rylant
Publication Date
August 01, 1997
Genre / Grade Band
Fiction /  K − 1st
Language
English
Cat Heaven
This book is currently unavailable.
Description

A joyous celebration of a cat's journey after a happy life on Earth by Newbery Medalist Cynthia Rylant.

The way to Cat Heaven is a field of sweet grass, where crickets and butterflies play! With a gentle, playful rhyme, Newbery Medalist Cynthia Rylant explores all the ways our beloved cats enjoy Cat Heaven, as she did for dogs in the bestselling companion book, Dog Heaven. Her shining artwork illustrates a world of peace for cats in Heaven, where no tree is too tall for exploring, where there is no lack of angels' laps for sleeping.

If your child wonders where his or her kitty goes after a happy life on Earth, they can rest assured that all cats know where the angel cats fly. They'll run past the stars and the moon and the sun . . . to curl up with God in the sky.

Publication date
August 01, 1997
Genre
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780590100540
Lexile Measure
490
Publisher
Blue Sky Press
BISAC categories
JUV002050 - Juvenile Fiction | Animals | Cats
Library of Congress categories
Cats
Stories in rhyme
Heaven

Publishers Weekly

Those who liked Rylant's Dog Heaven will undoubtedly welcome this companion volume, which is similar in its themes and execution. The text, this time in rhyme, has the same complement of sentimentality; the art again consists of bright, cheery paintings rendered in a primitive style. Detractors, however, will note the same weaknesses present in the earlier volume. The language seems coy or precious: "The way to Cat Heaven/ is a field of sweet grass/ where crickets/ and butterflies play..../ There's just so much fun on the way!" The rhymes often strain: when a cat needs to "just simply ponder," Rylant says, "she will watch the old house/ where she once lived and wandered." Here God is multicultural—his face alternates between pink, brown and beige on different pages—and he really likes cats. God sits reading in Cat Heaven, where cats "are so loved and spoiled/ God lets them all/ lie on His bed," and when he walks in his garden there is "a kitty asleep on His head." Whether or not this view of heaven will please the clergy or be helpful to children who have lost pets, Rylant's feel-good book is bound to appeal to adults whose taste in reading is dominated by a pronounced sweet tooth. A surer bet for Rylant fans is The Blue Hill Meadows (reviewed below). All ages. (Sept.)

Copyright 1997 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission

School Library Journal

PreS-Gr 2—Cat Heaven sounds like paradise. A rhyming text describes a realm in which felines are fed from God's countertop, a place where they no longer get stuck in trees because now they can fly. There are thousands of toys, and soft angel laps in which to cuddle. There is even a quiet time to look back on former homes and loving people. The primitive, childlike painting style is similar to Rylant's work in Dog Heaven (Scholastic, 1995). Both books serve the same purpose of comforting anyone mourning a lost pet, but the writing flows more easily and the pictures are more mature in Cat Heaven. The story has spiritualism and reverence but not in a traditional manner. God is depicted as a kindly older man who washes the cats' bowls and "walks in His garden with a good black book and a kitty asleep on His head." His coloring varies from pink to brown to yellowish tan. The visual impact of the book is stunning. Cats of all colors frolic through the exuberantly hued pages. Vibrant yellows, blues, reds, purples, and greens create a feast for the eyes. Even the color of the text changes to contrast with the background. Whether read as a story to younger children or used in a discussion of the nature of heaven with older ones, this deceptively simple, sweet book is rewarding.—Lucinda Snyder Whitehurst, St. Christopher's School, Richmond, VA

Copyright 1997 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission

Cynthia Rylant
Cynthia Rylant is the author of more than 100 books for young people, including the beloved Henry and Mudge, Annie and Snowball, Brownie & Pearl, Motor Mouse, and Mr. Putter & Tabby series. Her novel Missing May received the Newbery Medal. She lives in Portland, Oregon.

Lisa Congdon is an author, illustrator, and fine artist. Her books include Round by Jennifer Ward and, for adults, her own Whatever You Are, Be a Good One; Art, Inc.; Fortune Favors the Brave; and The Joy of Swimming. She lives in Portland, Oregon. You can see more of her work at LisaCongdon.com.
More books like this