Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Nini Lost and Found

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

A simple--and simply beautiful--story for young cat lovers.

One beautiful autumn day, Nini, a little tabby cat, sees that the door is open. The garden and nearby woods seem to beckon her to explore. Nini thinks the great outdoors is really, really, really nice . . . until night falls and strange animals begin sniffing and hooting and lurking about. Suddenly there is no place like home. This warm and reassuring picture book speaks to children whose curiosity has tempted them to "run away" from home. Caldecott Honor Book artist Anita Lobel's illustrations have never been more beautiful. Endearing portraits of her own beloved Nini cat in a lush autumnal setting will gladden the hearts of cat lovers of all ages.

  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 13, 2010
      Inspired by the adventures of Caldecott Honor–winning Lobel's own cat, the story opens as Nini, the striped tabby from Nini Here and There, spies a door ajar one day, "when the sky was very blue and the world outside was more inviting than ever." After venturing out, the cat looks back on her owners' farmhouse and recalls its comforting pleasures. But the outdoors beckons ("What soft mosses. What great leaves. What good tree trunks"), until night falls and the sight and sounds of threatening animals scare her into hiding. Hearing her family calling for her, Nini eventually summons the courage to dash home. Nini's mood-swinging interior monologue is endearing, and even more memorable are her dramatic facial expressions, ranging from fearful to entirely contented. Lobel's signature flowers are in full bloom—indoors and out—in her painterly gouache and watercolor art. Children won't need to be cat lovers to identify with Nini's tug-of-war between the familiarity and safety of home and the call of the wild—"Oh, but it was great out here." Ages 4–8.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from August 15, 2010
      Temptation leads Nini the tabby cat out an open door, away from her cozy house, through a vibrant garden and beyond, into dark woods. Nini's comfortable, compartmentalized indoor life appears in appropriately rigid, rectangular panels at the beginning of her story; she sits by the fire, curls in a tangle of yarn, snuggles in a quilt, all within safe little boxes. As she meanders through the garden's long grasses and bright zinnias, however, straight, structured boundaries give way to floating, sunny scenes on white space. Nini thinks, "Oh, this is really, really, really nice." Upon her entrance into the wild woods, whiteness completely disappears; branches, brambles and animals consume double-page spreads, running right off the borders. Night falls, and the watercolor-and-gouache paintings turn dark and dizzying; their once-charming intricacy sours into sickening confusion. Poor Nini! Lobel captures a cat's clear, opinionated and lovably hedonistic thinking in her simple storytelling. She also introduces the joys of home, the thrill of freedom and the scariness of the unknown to young readers, who will strain to hear the calls of Nini's owners in the night. (Picture book. 4-8)

      (COPYRIGHT (2010) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • School Library Journal

      September 1, 2010

      PreS-Gr 2-The feline heroine of Nini Here and There (Greenwillow, 2007) is back in a book that captures all of the charm of its predecessor. When a door is accidently left open, Nini seizes the opportunity to explore a world that is wider and wilder than the familiar, cozy confines of her own house. The foliage and critters lure her farther away, and Nini revels in their delights until night falls. Suddenly, what was welcoming and beautiful becomes menacing to the little cat. But all ends well, with a philosophical Nini reflecting that there still might be more adventures in her future. The feline's world, both inside and out, is full of lush details that Lobel renders with gouache and watercolor illustrations. Although the illustrations are heavily detailed and full of things to see, the pages do not appear cluttered because of the white space that frames each picture. The white space disappears once night falls and the pictures, suitably, feel claustrophobic. Nini's own epiphany is best revealed by the two window shots that open and close the book; the title page shows her in close-up, sitting in a window, gazing out. She is framed by the sill, boxed in, and safe. The final image is Nini again in that window, but the perspective is from across the yard, so that she is but a small creature gazing upon the outside landscape that dominates the scene. This is an attractive, quiet book to share with young adventurers.-Kara Schaff Dean, Walpole Public Library, MA

      Copyright 2010 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from August 1, 2010
      Preschool-G *Starred Review* The last time readers met Nini, the beguiling striped tabby, she thought she was being left behind when her family went away (Nini Here and There, 2007). Now it is Nini who is making travel plans, thanks to an open door. Once outside, Nini walks slowly away from home, then moves faster, and before long she is very far away indeed. Reveling in new sights and smells, Nini thinks, Oh, this is really, really, really nice. But darkness brings strange sounds, and Nini smells danger. One scary spread shows a fox, an owl, and a big brown bear who chase her into the hollow of an old tree. Now being outside is not so nice; Nini wants to go home, and someone wants her home, too. Come back, come back, little miss cat. Nini doesnt know what to do. If she leaves her hiding place, the animals might catch her; but I must be brave, she tells herself as she runs toward home. Scolded, yes, but then cuddled and loved, Nini is glad to be home . . . for now. Told with an elegant simplicity that children will appreciate (they might have some of the same thoughts themselves), this is filled with Lobels endearing watercolor-and-gouache artwork, with big swirls of emotion and the tiniest nod of relief in a little cats upturned lip. A wonderful read-aloud, with the length of the text, the size of the art, and the adventure of the tale all being just right.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2010, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2011
      Feline Nini (Nini Here and There) loves her fireplace, couch, etc. But someone has left the door open, and out she goes to explore. When the sky darkens, can Nini find her way home? There's just enough tension for preschoolers, but the pictures, even the semi-scary nighttime spreads, are too bountifully warm to leave anything but a happy ending in doubt.

      (Copyright 2011 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      Starred review from November 1, 2010
      Nini (from Nini Here and There) loves her feline queendom, with a fireplace, a couch, and a quilt just a few of its pleasures, but someone has left the door open, and out she goes to explore. The garden is beautiful (as it should be, given that Lobel is our premier painter of flowers), but the woods beyond offer the more exotic pleasures of leaves, mosses, and tree trunks as well as little creatures to find (kids can play along here) and stalk. But then the sky darkens, the trees close over, and the creatures get bigger and more predatory; can Nini find her way safely home? There is just enough tension for the preschool audience here, but the pictures, even the semi-scary nighttime spreads, are too bountifully warm to leave anything but a happy ending in doubt. The page design neatly segues from securely framed vignettes of Nini's contented indoor life to full pages for the riot of life and color that is the woods; in the end, Nini is once again at home, securely bundled not just in the frame but in a nest of scarves in an open drawer, a shelf of cat books (Why Kittens is one of them) and pot of daisies above her. The wild world can wait..."for now." roger sutton

      (Copyright 2010 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading