Cat Apron
6.99 €
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In the book of the American writer Beverly Cleary, events are described from the point of view of the cat, which will allow you to understand the true causes of the actions of the main character and more than once make the reader laugh from the heart at his tricks.
The apron came to the Brickers by accident - a young couple bought it from a store for fifty cents. It was a striped kitten with white legs and a white breast, like a neat apron, for which he got his name. Brickers in the pet did not want a soul, and over time he grew into a beautiful, graceful cat, tied to loving owners, but wayward. He slept in the living room on the couch, ate all sorts of goodies, drove a ping-pong ball around the rooms, and everything revolved around Fartuk until a new family member appeared in the house. Since that day, the cat's life has been turned upside down. All the love and attention went to tiny Charles William, and Apron felt rejected. He lost interest in games and grew fat on the remnants of a sweet mixture in which he found only solace. And when he was put on a diet, depriving him of this joy, he began to drag sausages from the kitchen and hunt the fur slippers of the hostess. One night he viciously sneaked into the living room where his grandmother was sleeping, pulled her wig off the table and disheveled it so that it looked like a crow's nest.
The hosts' patience burst when Apron grabbed Mrs Bricker's ankle - not out of anger but simply to remind him of himself and how hungry he was. A biting cat in the house was not needed and Fartuk was thrown out the door. From a domestic cat, he became a street cat. At the same time, Fartuk still loved his owners, and after a terrible fight with Old Taylor, he became convinced that the Brickers loved him and were always ready to help. But he regained his rightful place in the family after he pulled Charles William out of trouble.
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The apron came to the Brickers by accident - a young couple bought it from a store for fifty cents. It was a striped kitten with white legs and a white breast, like a neat apron, for which he got his name. Brickers in the pet did not want a soul, and over time he grew into a beautiful, graceful cat, tied to loving owners, but wayward. He slept in the living room on the couch, ate all sorts of goodies, drove a ping-pong ball around the rooms, and everything revolved around Fartuk until a new family member appeared in the house. Since that day, the cat's life has been turned upside down. All the love and attention went to tiny Charles William, and Apron felt rejected. He lost interest in games and grew fat on the remnants of a sweet mixture in which he found only solace. And when he was put on a diet, depriving him of this joy, he began to drag sausages from the kitchen and hunt the fur slippers of the hostess. One night he viciously sneaked into the living room where his grandmother was sleeping, pulled her wig off the table and disheveled it so that it looked like a crow's nest.
The hosts' patience burst when Apron grabbed Mrs Bricker's ankle - not out of anger but simply to remind him of himself and how hungry he was. A biting cat in the house was not needed and Fartuk was thrown out the door. From a domestic cat, he became a street cat. At the same time, Fartuk still loved his owners, and after a terrible fight with Old Taylor, he became convinced that the Brickers loved him and were always ready to help. But he regained his rightful place in the family after he pulled Charles William out of trouble.
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See also:
- All books by the publisher
- All books by the author
- All books in the series Interesting reading