Imagen del autor

Mary Calhoun (1926–2015)

Autor de Hot-Air Henry

56+ Obras 2,774 Miembros 64 Reseñas 1 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Mary Calhoun was born on August 3, 1926 in Keokuk, Iowa. She received a bachelor of arts degree in journalism from the University of Iowa. She worked at the Omaha World Herald before marrying fellow journalist Frank Calhoun. Her first book, Making the Mississippi Shout, was published in 1957. She mostrar más wrote more than 50 children's books during her lifetime including the Katie John series, Julie's Tree, Henry the Sailor Cat, and Cross-Country Cat. She died on October 27, 2015 at the age of 89. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos

Incluye el nombre: Mary Calhoun

Créditos de la imagen: via Bud Werner Memorial Libary

Series

Obras de Mary Calhoun

Hot-Air Henry (1981) 349 copias
Cross-Country Cat (1979) 321 copias
Katie John (1960) 303 copias
Honestly, Katie John (1963) 227 copias
Depend on Katie John (1961) 161 copias
A Shepherd's Gift (1721) 142 copias
The House of Thirty Cats (1965) 129 copias
Henry the Sailor Cat (1994) 109 copias
The Witch of Hissing Hill (1964) 103 copias
High-Wire Henry (1991) 69 copias
Old Man Whickutt's Donkey (1800) 63 copias
Blue-Ribbon Henry (1999) 60 copias
Euphonia and the Flood (1836) 60 copias
Katie John and Heathcliff (1895) 60 copias
Flood (1997) 46 copias
Wobble, the Witch Cat (1981) 46 copias
The Night the Monster Came (1982) 44 copias
White Witch of Kynance (1970) 42 copias
While I Sleep (1992) 41 copias
Magic in the Alley (1970) 37 copias
The Hungry Leprechaun (1962) 36 copias
Henry the Christmas Cat (2004) 32 copias
Tonio's Cat (1996) 28 copias
High Wind for Kansas (1965) 23 copias
Audubon Cat (1981) 19 copias
Big Sixteen (1983) 16 copias
Ownself (1975) 15 copias
The Goblin Under the Stairs (1968) 14 copias
Julie's Tree (1988) 13 copias
Jack and the Whoopee Wind (1987) 12 copias
Three kinds of stubborn (1972) 11 copias
The Flower Mother (1972) 10 copias
The Runaway Brownie (1967) 10 copias
The horse comes first (1974) 9 copias
Adventure with Child (1987) 5 copias
The Sweet Patootie Doll (1970) 3 copias
The Thieving Dwarfs (1967) 3 copias
Cowboy Cal and the Outlaw (1961) 3 copias
Mrs. Dog's Own House (1972) 2 copias
Houn' dog 2 copias
River-Minded Boy (1958) 1 copia
The Difference (1993) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Cricket Magazine, Vol. 8, No. 9, May 1981 (1981) — Contribuidor — 3 copias
Cricket Magazine, Vol. 3, No. 7, March 1976 (1976) — Contribuidor — 3 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1926-08-03
Fecha de fallecimiento
2015-10-27
Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugares de residencia
Clark, Colorado, USA

Miembros

Debates

YA/Young Girl-Growing Up Katie(y) Scholastic Book? en Name that Book (septiembre 2011)
Middle grade book--kids with a magic box en Name that Book (agosto 2011)

Reseñas

Falinda the good witch is always accompanied her cat, Shadow. One morning Shadow does not return from his nightly adventures. Falinda searches everywhere with no success. The children bring her kittens, but Falinda has no interest in replacing her dear pet. That is, until a little kitten keeps appearing at her doorstep seeking attention and bringing gifts.
 
Denunciada
MrsBond | otra reseña | Jun 27, 2023 |
I first borrowed this book from the school library when I was a kid in the 1970s, and I fell in love with it. Years later, I looked it up online and found this original edition.
 
Denunciada
swigget | 2 reseñas más. | Jan 21, 2023 |
This book's premise is totally preposterous -- a cat on cross-country skis -- but it embraces it with verve and the result is a good story. Forms a nice diptych with North Country Night because you see a lot of the same wildlife, but it's hard to get the target age audience to sit through both in one session.
 
Denunciada
KSchellVT | 5 reseñas más. | Mar 10, 2022 |
House of Thirty Cats was one of the first Chapter books I read in elementary school. I recently bought a used copy online because I wanted to read the book again. It was one of my favorite books as a child, probably because I love cats.

I first read this book in 3rd grade, just after adopting my first pet cat. The kitty was wandering around the grade school, homeless and getting thinner every day. I heard a teacher say that they were calling animal control to come pick her up. I couldn't let that happen. So I told a fib. I went inside and told my teacher that my kitty had followed me to school, asking if I could walk home (I only lived a couple blocks from the school) and take her back home before she got lost. My teacher gave me permission and I took this homeless kitty home with me. I rang the doorbell to my own house, because I knew better than to bring the cat in without asking permission first. I had practiced a good sob story during my walk from school. I had to talk my mother into letting me keep the cat. My mom opened the door and said no before I even got a word out. Then I begged.....I pulled the sad face and the "But mom, they are going to call animal control and she will be put to sleep if we don't give her a home.'' That worked. The kitty got to stay!!

I named her Tiger, which made no sense at all because she was a mostly white calico. I remember ordering this book from a school book order form soon after I got Tiger. I had a kitty of my own....and wanted to read a book about cats!

Mary Calhoun wrote many children's books, including the Henry Cat books and the Katie John series. The book was illustrated by Mary Chalmers. The pictures are simple black and white sketches, but I loved the drawings when I read the book as a child.

The plot is pretty basic. Sarah wants a kitten. She knows where she can get one, but she's afraid to ask. Miss Tabitha Henshaw has a lot of cats at her house. Sarah has even nicknamed the small old lady's home as The House of Thirty Cats. Miss Henshaw is a bit eccentric, so Sarah is afraid to ask if she might have a kitten. She finally works up the courage, and ends up making friends with Miss Henshaw and her cats. But then, a neighbor starts complaining that there are just too many cats. Miss Henshaw only has two weeks to get rid of most of her cats, or animal control will come in and remove them. Sarah agrees to help. Can she find homes for enough of the cats before time runs out?

I have loved cats since I was a little girl, so this story really tugged at my heartstrings back in the 70s when I read it the first time. As an adult, I still love the story, but found myself looking at the situation with grown-up concern. I foster for the local humane society. Mostly I foster orphan kittens who require bottle feeding. They take a lot of work and make a big mess. The most I've ever had was 7 fosters plus my 4 pets ...and the fosters only stayed til they were adopted. I can't imagine having 30 cats!! I sympathize with Miss Tabitha and with Sarah as a catlover.....but, as an adult, I also understand the neighbor's point. 30 cats is too many! Luckily Miss Tabitha had Sarah to help her find homes for most of her cats!

The cover shown above is the artwork I remember from my first copy of this book. The book has been reprinted several times since it was first published in 1965. The last time it was re-released was in 2002, so copies shouldn't be too hard to find.

My rating: 7/10
Ages 10
… (más)
1 vota
Denunciada
JuliW | 2 reseñas más. | Nov 22, 2020 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
56
También por
2
Miembros
2,774
Popularidad
#9,255
Valoración
3.8
Reseñas
64
ISBNs
154
Idiomas
3
Favorito
1

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