Allan Ahlberg was one of the UK's most acclaimed and successful authors of children's books - including the best-selling Jolly Postman series. Born in Croydon in 1938, he was educated at Sunderland Technical College. Although he dreamed of becoming a writer since the age of twelve, his route to that goal was somewhat circuitous. Other jobs along the way included postman (not an especially jolly one, he recalls), gravedigger, plumber, and teacher.
Ahlberg wrote his first book when he was thirty-seven, after a decade of teaching - a profession that he maintains is "much harder" than being a writer. He says that if he hadn't become a writer, he would have loved to be a soccer player. He was married for many years to fellow children's author Janet Ahlberg, with whom he often worked. Their daughter, Jessica Ahlberg, is also a children's author.
A rather silly story about a couple who chooses to adopt a cat baby instead of a human one. (I worry that the flowerpot-throwing baby will never find a home.) The whole thing is kind of surreal.
As whimsical and it is delightful, Ahlberg and Wegner come together again to tell a charming yet absurd story of a mature couple in search of a child. Off they head to Nurse Doodle who offers them many options including a baby who's rather good at throwing flower pots. They opt, in the end though, for a little anthropomorphic cat baby and whisk her home.
What follows, balanced beautifully between Ahleberg's fringingly familar pseudo-Victorian world and Wegner delicious line and wash illustrations, are a series of short nonsensical stories of our brave little kitten. From Christmas to Fireworks to being lost to watching tennis games at night are a series of charming, odd little stories which effortlessly draw you in. Nothing deep or clever here save for the spinning of a winsome series of yarns (which the kitten will no doubt pounce upon).
This is quite a strange little book but I can't complain because it's a children's book and children's minds work in mysterious ways. I really liked the illustrations (by Fritz Wegner) as they had a lot of detail so there was lots to look at and discuss, the way there usually is in an Ahlberg book.
This was my first Ahlberg book I believe, and I thought the illustrations done by Fritz Wegner fit the story well. I didn’t expect it to be a series of stories but somehow that added to the surreal feels of the book. I will look into reading more of his work because I was also surprised to learn he wrote more than 150 books! Maybe I have read others in the past but don’t remember them?
This book is very. . . random. There is not much a plot arc, although the quasi-chapters with titles and all create a sense that the book is building towards something. However, the rather abrupt ending dispels any hope of that. Even picture books should have some sort of discernible beginning, middle and ending layout to the story, and this book's lack thereof may leave some children unsatisfied, especially if this book is being used as a bridge between picture books and chapter books for kids reading on their own.
A delightfully mad and whimsical story, with exactly the sort of free-association that small children make up for themselves. A simple plot, but full of broad seriously-silly humor that makes little ones giggle.
If you enjoy Monty Python-style comedy where ridiculous details are delivered in a solemn tone, you will like this book. The illustrations add detail and another dimension to the story.
My 5 and 7 year old loved it. I would recommend for ages 4-8.
A bizarre book about a man and woman who want a baby and go to get one at the baby store. They end up choosing a cat baby and the adventure ensues. Very odd, but cute black and white illustrations that depict somewhat of a Victorian era.
An odd book about a childless couple who goes to the Baby Shop and ends up adopting a little cat baby. The cat baby is cute and does cute things, but it's really just kinda of weird how everything works out.
If you love cats and have a cat AND if you don't want children/can't have children, you might relate to this book and enjoy it a lot. The humor in this book is very tongue-in-cheek and a little random. I wish the illustrations were in color, but they are just drawings.
I liked this book because the wording was original and fun. The illustrations brought the story to life and created a fantasy world where cat babies are perfectly normal.