Where's my cat?

Seymour Chwast

Book - 2022

With bright, whimsical art, this humorous guessing game and visual puzzle from a legendary graphic designer will delight design fans of all ages. Is that a table--or a cow? You won't believe your eyes as this humorous guessing game and visual puzzle from award-winning graphic designer Seymour Chwast, co-founder of the legendary Push Pin Studios, transforms a simple object into something completely different. Each delightfully drawn initial image is revealed, after a page turn, to be part of a larger or more elaborate thing. The objects become both more complex and sillier--ball and toaster? Nah, it's a bulldog--as we make our way to the final transformation, a pair of scissors that becomes the face of the cat we've been waiti...ng for. Readers young and old will giggle as they see the importance of recognizing odd but simple shapes and learning how they work together to form more complicated images.

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Subjects
Genres
Animal fiction
Humorous fiction
Picture books
Published
[Place of publication not identified] : mineedition US, an imprint of Astra Publishing House [2022].
Language
English
Main Author
Seymour Chwast (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 25 cm
ISBN
9781662650697
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Before the titular cat makes its eventual appearance in this drawing game turned picture book, readers are treated to an oddball menagerie fashioned from quotidian objects, thanks to Chwast's (Arno and the MiniMachine) visual sleights of hand. Following an opening page that reads "What's This?" in eclectic typography that vibrates with energy, the first spread queries "Saw and pickle?" as a line drawing of the two objects appears on the opposing page. A page turn later, readers see the reveal: the pickle has sprouted webbed feet and a lower jaw, and the saw has transitioned into a toothy mouth, making a "Crocodile!" Seven more offbeat objects-to-animals follow, with a few deft, comic lines adding personality: a gray sock gains tiny eager eyes, tusks, feet, and a snout, turning into a winningly portrayed walrus. But where is that cat? At long last, a pair of unassuming open scissors are revealed to be the eyes, nose, and mouth of a jet-black feline. The everyday world will look a little different after readers close this book--the reward of spending time in the company of an imaginative talent. Ages 2--5. (Mar.)

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Review by School Library Journal Review

K-Gr 2--Playfully exercising the imagination and having fun with shape associations, Chwast transforms seemingly random objects into animals with a page turn. Thus a saw and pickle become, respectively, the jaw and body of a crocodile. In one transformation, a tennis racket turns into a turtle with the addition of a head and feet around the rim, and in another, an old gray sock makes an appropriately rumpled walrus. The magic continues until, at last, a pair of scissors ends up as the eyes and nose of that elusive titular cat. The pictures and brightly colored, hand-lettered labels are drawn in such an offhand way that even children with rudimentary artistic skills will feel encouraged to continue the game with any items that happen to catch their eyes. There is story time potential here, too, in conjunction with other challenges to perspective or expectations like (in a classic vein) Tana Hoban's Look Book or Josse Goffin's Oh! VERDICT A clever way to encourage budding artists to look for visual correspondences in the world around them.--John Peters

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Review by Horn Book Review

In this odd little delight, Chwast takes objects you might find around the house and turns them into improbable animals. The story begins on the book's cover, which asks readers to "please find" the author's missing cat. Then the front endpapers introduce the series of objects featured in the book. From the very first pairing, where a pickle and a handsaw grow little green legs and a lower jaw to transform (after a page-turn) into a crocodile, young readers will know that they're in for a strange journey. A wrinkly old sock becomes a walrus, a table turns into a very square cow, and finally a pair of scissors improbably resolves itself into the face of the titular missing cat. Iconic graphic designer Chwast's signature psychedelic style is on full display here, including his large colorful lettering; huge question marks or exclamation points on every spread add an energetic, exuberant quality. The overall effect will induce giggles with each page-turn and may inspire children to try drawing something they see and turn it into a fanciful animal of their own. Laura Koenig May/June 2022 p.115(c) Copyright 2022. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.