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Catwings ursula
Catwings ursula




catwings ursula

How does the author make you believe kittens could have wings?.The illustrations are pen and ink with soft washes of pastels and add some lightness to the story. Great for kids just venturing into the world of reading novels.

catwings ursula

Surviving near starvation they finally find some children who will love and care for them. Roger, James, Harriet and Thelma soon discover that their city skills don't help much in the woods of the country and they must fight some fierce birds in order to secure their territory. Soon, the mother realizes that the power to fly will allow her kittens to escape the slums in which they live to find a better life. Life among the trash cans of the inner city is not good: the shoes and boots kick and the hands hurt. Jane Tabby's four kittens are born, she is surprised to see that they have wings. Definately, if you get one of the books, get them all, because they are so small, and after you finish the first, you are ready for the others.By Ursula Le Guin. It would be ideal to get all four books in one set, but that seems to be hard to find these days. I think of the old “See Dick Run” books, and wish that all early readers could be as imaginative as these. Written with simplicity, both in language and plot, they are very easy to follow. These are great read aloud books, and also easy books for a new reader who might want to read them on their own. enough so that I decided against reading it to my five-year-old grandson, but by six or seven, no problem. The stories also have a slight amount of scary parts. These are all pretty hefty themes for such little tales. And the Alexander story very deftly deals with how a child/kitten might handle trauma. In the second book, a kitten gets separated from her mother and gets quite frightened. In the first book, the cat children leave their mother, at her request. In addition to the imaginative aspect, each of the stories also deals with a potentially difficult theme for a child to deal with. It’s just real enough to be true to life, and then, that extra little thing, a wing! The settings are real, the troubles of the cats are real, and the fact that the cats have wings and can fly…well, perhaps that’s a stretch! What a wonderful way to weave fantasy into stories. This set of stories, beginning with Catwings, continuing with Catwings Return, Wonderful Alexander and the Catwings, and Jane on Her Own, are the perfect mixture of fantasy and realism. In four small children’s books, Ursula Le Guin has created a very endearing set of cat characters with personality, adventure, and wisdom. Jane Tabby could not explain why all four of her children had wings.”






Catwings ursula