From Publishers Weekly
A cat family melts down whenever dinner rolls around: Can this mealtime be saved? It certainly doesn't look promising. Rendering her wiry cats with eager, bright eyes and tense, upright postures, Voake comically conveys the anxiety and frustration of a family determined to sit down together and enjoy a pleasant meal. Mom can't seem to make anyone happy with her menu choices: "Fish sticks your favorite!" she says. "Not my favorite," replies one kitten. "I wanted baked beans," says another. "Oh no, not salad!" cry the three feline siblings in unison a few beats later. Dad's subsequent attempt at helming a civilized repast ("The next evening began well," the author writes ominously) degenerates into a whine-fest and sodden pea disaster. Voake gives her readers a front-row seat for these gastronomic train-wrecks. Most of the spreads resemble a stage set, as if the audience is sitting just a few feet in front of the cats' dining room table. Her distilled settings and electrified ink lines exude the edgy energy of an onlooker who is trying to record the action as it unfolds and can capture only the most telling details and emotions. As for the ending, Voake, a clearheaded observer of family dynamics, concludes with yet one more kitten mishap. But by serving up a conciliatory pizza ("Our favorite!" squeal the kittens) she also reassures readers that the family will endure to dine together again. Ages 3-5.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From School Library Journal
reSchool-Grade 1-Lucy, Joe, and Bert just want pizza for dinner. Mom and Dad only want them to sit down and behave, but with three energetic little kittens that seem to attract accidents, this seems impossible. Dad decides to serve peas, but the siblings insist they don't like them. ("Only one for me!") After a giant mess is made, Mom says they will try again the next night for an orderly dinnertime. They do- with pizza. But kittens will be kittens, and the last illustration shows Bert, pizza in one hand, glass of water in the other, tipped precariously on a chair-inviting children to tell what happens next. Kids and parents alike will recognize the familiar struggle: "Does this have onions in it?" "I think I can see carrots." Voake's signature style shines through in the sketchy watercolor-and-ink illustrations in which she captures, in the simplest of brushstrokes, both the kittens' wide-eyed recklessness and their parents' exasperation. This family story gets it right.
Kathleen Kelly MacMillan, Maryland School for the Deaf, ColumbiaCopyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.