![]() ![]() ![]() "About this title" may belong to another edition of this title. Marilyn Iarusso, New York Public LibraryĬopyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc. A handsome little book for middle readers. ![]() The illustrations are engaging pen-and-ink drawings with watercolor wash. ![]() This gently appealing story will mean more to those who enjoyed the more vigorous first book, but it is hard to resist a story that brings a terrified, lonely kitten home to a loving family. Although characterization is slight, there is enough to win readers' sympathy. Jane's decision, in the first book, to send her older children off to a new life so that she could begin a new liaison unfettered, but it seems in character. This may grate on those who criticized as unfeeling Mrs. She insists that they take the kitten to safety in the country. She is delighted to see her grown children and grateful that they've brought back her lost kitten. They find a frightened winged kitten before finding their mother, the genteel Mrs. 25 pages of student work, plus an answer key This novel study divides Catwings Return into five sections for study - one section for each chapter.Includes the following: Catwings Return novel study title page for students Before reading Catwings Return worksheet Author research worksheet Character chart Dictionary Look-up. Grade 2-4- James and Harriet, the youngest and most adventurous of four winged cats, return from the country refuge that they found in Catwings (Orchard, 1988) to the inner-city slum where they were born, to see their mother again. A novel study for Catwings Return by Ursula K. ![]()
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