From Publishers Weekly
Resentful of his parents' recent separation, Brad refuses to visit his mother at her new apartment with its "postage stamp" of a pool, nor will he answer her Friday night calls. Bribery and bullying "persuade" younger brother Charlie to follow suit. Both boys are temporarily distracted from family troubles when a stray cat wanders into their lives and promptly has kittens in the backyard shed. The challenge of keeping the animals a secret from their father (who dislikes the idea of pets) grows even more complicated when the mother cat apparently kills one of the kittens. The fury Brad feels toward his own mother, deftly paralleled by his negative attitude toward the "bad mother cat," provides tension throughout this contemporary story and prepares the audience for the protagonist's eventual unleashing of emotions. Bauer's ( On My Honor ) portrayal of animal abuse and unseemly aspects of animal instinct is graphic enough to make pet owners cringe; yet her "all's well that ends well" conclusion, in which Brad comes to terms with painful truths, will soothe disquieted readers. Ages 9-12.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From School Library Journal
Grade 4-6-Brad and Charlie spend the majority of this novel in emotional agony, trying to ignore the fact that their mother has recently left home. They find a stray cat with two kittens, and fearing that their father will take the animals to the humane society, care for them in secret. One kitten dies and the boys think the mother, Cat, is reponsible. They expel her from the shed and nurse the second kitten using money Brad has stolen from their father to buy supplies. Cat sneaks back to nurse the second kitten, and in a fit of rage over a mother who doesn't care for her young properly the brothers almost kill her. Horrified, Brad tells his father. The whole truth comes out on the way to the veterinarian. They learn that the mother didn't kill her kitten, and was doing her best to care for the living one. Brad realizes that by leaving home, his mother was doing her best to care for him and Charlie. This metaphor works well to tie the story together. A reunion at Mom's apartment ensues. Once again, Bauer has written a novel for middle-grade readers about a difficult subject. The relationships and dialogue are believable and involving. As in her other books, there are no easy solutions or neat endings, but instead, she offers hope for resolution and healing.
Lynn Cockett, Nutley Public Library, NJCopyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.