Author picture

Erick Ingraham

Author of Hot-Air Henry

5+ Works 1,080 Members 14 Reviews

Series

Works by Erick Ingraham

Hot-Air Henry (1981) — Illustrator — 405 copies, 6 reviews
Cross-Country Cat (1979) — Illustrator — 380 copies, 6 reviews
Henry the Sailor Cat (1994) — Illustrator — 138 copies, 1 review
High-Wire Henry (1991) — Illustrator — 88 copies, 1 review
Blue-Ribbon Henry (1999) — Illustrator — 69 copies

Associated Works

Harry and Shellburt (Ready-To-Read) (1977) — Illustrator — 120 copies
Little Daylight: A Fairy Story (1945) — Illustrator, some editions — 63 copies, 1 review
Flood (1997) — Illustrator — 53 copies, 13 reviews
Henry the Christmas Cat (2004) — Illustrator — 43 copies, 1 review
Night in the Barn (1995) — Illustrator — 36 copies, 2 reviews
The Animals' Lullaby (1993) — Illustrator — 30 copies
Old Blue (1980) 15 copies
Wide-Angle Lens: Stories of Time and Space (1980) — Illustrator — 9 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1950-12-23
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

14 reviews
This book's premise is totally preposterous -- a cat on cross-country skis -- but it embraces it with verve and the result is a good story. Forms a nice diptych with North Country Night because you see a lot of the same wildlife, but it's hard to get the target age audience to sit through both in one session.
Henry doesn’t understand why The Kid likes sliding around in the snow. The Kid made him a specialized pair of cat-sized skis, but Henry sank into the snow and yowled. He decided people were crazy for wanting to slide around on the snow.

As the family packs up to head for home, Henry realizes his favorite toy mouse, a fluff of purple yarn, is still in the ski lodge and he dashes in to retrieve it from beneath The Kid’s bed. But no one sees him go inside and the family drives away without show more Henry. What will Henry do? How can he get home?

This picture book, for children aged five through eight, will delight all cat-lovers of all ages. However, with a Lexile level of AD640L, it is a book for parents to read to young children. Beautifully illustrated, this charming tale of bravery, determination, and creative problem-solving is certain to become a favorite with young readers.

Recommended.
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The story is engaging, and this book would be amazing to use in an art class setting because the various pages show the scene from the hot air balloon looking down, the scene looking up at the hot air balloon, the scene looking up into the balloon. It could spark a wonderful discussion on perspective.
This is the story of a cat whose Kid owner wanted him to ski. Henry the cat didn't want to ski, but he had to in the end when he was inadvertently left behind in the family's cabin after the family headed home in their car.

I couldn't really get into this story. What happened to Henry seemed unusually cruel. I know this is a kid's book and fantasy, but the pictures were very realistic of a Siamese cat. The cat was out in the cold. It had its hind feet stuck into tiny skis. The terrain over show more which Henry the cat traveled was extremely snowy and cold. Maybe I'm overthinking this story because I had feral cats who had to fend for themselves outside when it snowed.

I like the drawings in this book, but I would much rather read a cat story about a cat in a warm, snugly environment. I wasn't too impressed with the Man whose only two words in this book were "Idiotic cat!"
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Statistics

Works
5
Also by
8
Members
1,080
Popularity
#23,804
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
14
ISBNs
53
Languages
2

Charts & Graphs