Margins
The Valentine Cat book cover
The Valentine Cat
1959
First Published
4.19
Average Rating
54
Number of Pages

A lonely painter has given up on his life's work—until he takes in a half-starved kitten. Soon he decides that the heart-shaped mark on the kitten's face must be lucky. The little cat gives the painter new belief in his art, and his paintings get better and better. Then the cat is stolen, and the painter finds himself lonelier than ever. But where a Valentine cat in concerned, things have a way of ending happily after all. Especially once the little cat makes his way to the palace, where a kindhearted princess puts everything right again. This charming story pairs Clyde Robert Bulla's masterful storytelling with dramatic art from Caldecott Medalist Leonard Weisgard. In paperback for the first time, this classic has been meticulously reproduced using the original illustrations.

Avg Rating
4.19
Number of Ratings
118
5 STARS
42%
4 STARS
43%
3 STARS
9%
2 STARS
5%
1 STARS
1%
goodreads

Author

Clyde Robert Bulla
Clyde Robert Bulla
Author · 38 books

Born to be a Writer Almost as far back as he can remember, Clyde Robert Bulla wanted to write. Born on a farm in a small town in Missouri, Mr. Bulla's first school was a one-room country schoolhouse. One day his teacher asked each first grade student what he or she would do with a thousand dollars. Young Clyde answered that he would buy a table. His classmates laughed heartily, and his teacher was puzzled. “What I really meant,” says Mr. Bulla, “is a desk or other flat surface on which to write my stories!” First Stories Mr. Bulla's first piece of writing was titled, “How Planets Were Born.” The ambitious opening sentence was, “One night old Mother Moon had a million babies.” All through school, Mr. Bulla continued to write stories mostly, but plays and poetry, too. After years of gathering editor's rejection slips, Mr. Bulla sold a magazine story, then several more. Soon after, Mr. Bulla wrote a novel and a publisher accepted it. The Difficult Years In the excitement of publishing a novel, Mr. Bulla wrote two more books. Unfortunately, no one wanted to publish them. His luck took a turn for the worse when the publisher of his first book went bankrupt. For several years, he worked at a local weekly newspaper where he struggled with linotype, kept books, collected bills, and wrote a weekly column. Success! A couple of Mr. Bulla's weekly columns caught the attention of a well-known author and illustrator of children's books. She wrote to Mr. Bulla, suggesting that he try writing a children's book. He immediately sent her a manuscript for a children's book he'd written a year before. Within one week, an editor of a New York publisher read the manuscript,and it was accepted. The book was The Donkey Cart, published in 1946. Since then, Mr. Bulla has written over twenty books for children, as well as the music for several children's song books. About The Chalk Box Kid “When I was young,” explains Mr. Bulla, “I sometimes found it hard to cope in new surroundings, and I was apt to get off on the wrong foot. This is the story of a boy who got off on the wrong foot in a new school and how he tried to cope.” In describing the chalk garden, Mr. Bulla says, “I gave Gregory something I've always wished for: a big, blank wall that I could cover with my own drawings.”

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