Picture of author.

Lee Nordling

Author of BirdCatDog

15+ Works 308 Members 24 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: via Reedsy

Series

Works by Lee Nordling

Associated Works

Once Upon a Time Machine (2012) — Contributor — 144 copies, 6 reviews
Rugrats Comic Adventures, Vol. 2, No. 5 (1999) — Contributor — 1 copy
Rugrats Comic Adventures, Vol. 2, No. 6 (1999) — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
20th Century
Gender
male

Members

Reviews

29 reviews
Cute! I really liked the fantastical aspect of how musical chairs look here. Everything looks 10x bigger and the stakes are high. It plays into the stressful uncertainty that the game prides itself on lol.

The artwork was cartoony and conveyed action and expression well without written dialogue.
BirdCatDog by Lee Nordling is a mostly wordless (the only words being at the start and finish of the book) graphic novel about a bird, a cat, and a dog. Or rather, it's three parallel but interconnected, mostly wordless, graphic novels: one about a bird, one about a cat, and one about a dog.

At the top of each page is the story of the bird, done in shades of sky blue. In the middle, is the story of the cat, done in shades of green. At the bottom is the story of the dog, done in oranges and show more reds.

The bird's story is one of flight, beginning with the escape from the birdcage hanging near an open window. With freedom, though, comes responsibility and danger. The bird soon finds itself being chased from below by the cat and from above by a bird of prey. The bird then must weigh the exhilaration of freedom against the guaranteed survival of captivity.

The cat, being a cat, can't help but go after the bird. In the process of being caught up in the thrill of the chase, it overlooks its own dangers (the dog for example). And like all cats, it knows how to lick its wounds nonchalantly when things don't turn out as expected.

Finally there's the dog who wants nothing but to get out of the backyard. But once free, there's more to do (like chase the cat and bark at the dog). It too finds the woods to be far more than expected.

As this short graphic novel progresses, more and more of the threads intertwine. There are other characters too who join in the fray. And at the end, the book asks the same question as the beginning: who is the hero of the story? Is it the bird? the cat? The dog? Or maybe one of the other characters introduced. As the book is so open ended, that answer is left up to the interpretation (and mood) of the reader.
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This is a cute wordless graphic novel tht explores underwater dwellers surviving in their environment, we follow 3 different fish as their paths intersect with each other. I enjoyed this graphic novel a lot more than Bird Cat Dog, which I thought tried to hard to mesh three stories into one. This story was clear, the artwork fantastic, and I think children would understand this wordless adventure and have fun exploring the pages back and forth over and over again.
This is a beautiful book with stunning illustrations. Told almost wordless the pictures are still able to convey a story about a boy that has an experience with a bully and takes a trip to the "brambles" where he learns how to stand up for himself. This is a great option to have in a classroom library with younger children that may not be able to read yet or are only starting to learn because it takes on an important topic without the need for words.

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Statistics

Works
15
Also by
5
Members
308
Popularity
#76,455
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
24
ISBNs
48

Charts & Graphs