A couple of cool cats

The Rare Bird by Elisha Cooper (Roaring Brook Press, 40 pages, ages 4-8). After studying the pages of several different books, a cat decides he will spend the day as a rare bird. The Rare Bird flies through the forest, lands in the flowers, then splashes through a waterfall and a gurgling pond. The illustrations show a cat running through the living room, landing on the carpet, and splashing through the shower and into the toilet. The whole day is like that, with the Rare Bird imagining all sorts of adventures from the ordinary objects of everyday life. At the end, the cat’s little girl shows him a book about an elephant, and the cat falls asleep dreaming about the next day when he will be an Extraordinary Elephant.

Readers will love poring over Cooper’s illustrations, making connections between what the cat is doing and what he is imagining. The endpapers, depicting dolphins in the front and elephants at the end, give hints as to how the cat has spent and will spend the days on either side of this day. A cute cat story as well as an enchanting ode to the power of imagination.

Lulu Didn’t Want a Dog by Laurel Molk (Random House Studio, 40 pages, ages 3-8). Lulu the cat is dismayed when she hears a rescue dog is joining the family. Gus turns out to be everything she feared; dirty, loud, and constantly getting into trouble. Her human keeps encouraging her to give Gus another chance, but time after time, Gus lets Lulu down. One day, Lulu leaps into a tree while chasing a bird, and enjoys a rare moment to herself…until the branch she’s sitting on gives way and plunges her into the frigid pond below. Gus jumps in after her, grabs the branch Lulu is still clinging to, and swims to shore. As the two of them curl up in Gus’s dog bed that night, Lulu decides that maybe Gus is “pretty okay” after all.

The cute and funny illustrations tell much of the story as they show Gus getting into the cupcakes, having fun with a roll of toilet paper, and getting sprayed by a skunk, all while Lulu watches disdainfully from a distance. This would make a good sibling gift, as it shows the ups and downs of having a new family member while avoiding any sort of preachiness or obvious lessons.

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