The Mousehole Cat

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The Mousehole Cat
File:MouseholeCat.jpg
The Mousehole Cat cover
Author Antonia Barber
Illustrator Nicola Bayley
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Children
Publisher Walker Books Ltd
Publication date
1991
Pages 40
ISBN 0-7445-2353-2

The Mousehole Cat is a children's book written by Antonia Barber and illustrated by Nicola Bayley. Based on the legend of Cornish fisherman Tom Bawcock and the stargazy pie,[1] it tells the tale of a cat who goes with its owner on a fishing expedition in rough seas. The book has won awards, including the 1991 British Book Award for Illustrated Children's Book of the Year. It has since been adapted into a 1994 animated film, a puppet show and is being adapted as a stage musical.

Plot

One very stormy winter, none of the fishermen of the village of Mousehole /ˈmzəl/ in Cornwall have been able to leave the harbour for a long while and the village is near starvation. Tom Bawcock and his loyal black and white cat, Mowzer, decide to brave the storms and set sail to catch some fish. When the boat hits the storm, it is represented by a giant "Storm-Cat", which allows Mowzer to eventually save the day by soothing the storm with her purring. This purring becomes a song and while the Storm-Cat is resting Tom is able to haul in his catch and return to harbour. When they arrive back at the village, the entire catch is cooked into various dishes, including half a hundred "star-gazy" pies, on which the villagers feast.[1]

Layout

The book is laid out to encourage reading with a child; it is wide enough to fit across two laps.[1] The illustrations are "framed" within the pages, with a general background of a seascape and the illustration related to the page shown in a window.[1]

Awards

Besides winning the Illustrated Children's Book of the Year at the 1991 British Book Awards[2] and the British Design Production Award (Children's Books), the book was shortlisted for the Nestlé Smarties Book Prize children's choice, the Children's Book Award and was commended for the Kate Greenaway Medal.

Other versions

In 1994, Grasshopper Enterprises created an animated version of the tale as part of Channel 4's Beastly Xmas in 1995, narrated by Sian Phillips.[3] More recently, the tale has been adapted into a puppet show by PuppetCraft.[4] The book has been featured on Jackanory Junior for the BBC, read by Shobna Gulati; it was first broadcast on 22 June 2007.[5]

References

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External links