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Margot Austin (1909–1990)

Author of Stories and Fables

27+ Works 573 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

Series

Works by Margot Austin

Stories and Fables (1981) 219 copies, 1 review
The Churchmouse Stories (1984) 130 copies
A Friend for Growl Bear (1951) 58 copies
Peter Churchmouse (1984) 40 copies
Barney's Adventure (1942) 33 copies
Gabriel Churchkitten (1942) 19 copies, 1 review
The Very Young Mother Goose (1968) 10 copies
Trumpet (1959) 10 copies, 1 review
Willamette Way (1941) 8 copies
Cousin's Treasure (1966) 5 copies
Churchkitten Stories (1984) 5 copies
Brave John Henry (1955) 4 copies
Barney's Adventures (1941) 3 copies
Effelli (1942) 3 copies

Associated Works

Mother Goose Rhymes (1922) — Illustrator, some editions — 40 copies
David's Silver Dollar (1940) — Illustrator — 16 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
Helser, Margot (née)
Birthdate
1909
Date of death
1990-06-25
Gender
female
Education
National Academy of Design
Occupations
children's book author
Relationships
Austin, Darrel (husband)
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Portland, Oregon, USA
Place of death
New Fairfield, Connecticut, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
Gabriel Churchkitten puts on his "thinking-hat" in this cute-as-a-button vintage picture-book from 1942, determined to find a way to prevent Parson Pease-Porridge - in whose church he and his good friend, Peter Churchmouse live - from keeping everyone up all night with his snacking and organ-playing. With the arrival on the scene of Trumpet - a friendly puppy who just happens to be at the door - the pair gain a new friend, and a new partner in their campaign to keep the good parson in his show more bed at nights. Finally, after many failed attempts - involving everything from hiding the parson's glasses to stopping up the organ with chewing gum - Gabriel remembers something the parson once said, and is inspired...

The second of a series of picture-books Margot Austin wrote about the small animal inhabitants of Parson Pease-Porridge's church - the first being Peter Churchmouse (1941), the third Trumpet (1943) - Gabriel Churchkitten has some of the most adorable illustrations I have seen of late! The black and white drawings (pencil, I assume?) are very much of their time, but will still charm the contemporary reader. Unfortunately, while I loved Austin's artwork, her narrative left a little bit to be desired, jumping from scene to scene in a very confusing fashion. The three conspirators are observing the failure of one of Gabriel's ideas on one page, and then, with no segue at all, no indication of it suddenly being the next night, they are considering the parson as he goes to bed again! It took me a few scenes to figure out what was going on.

Despite that flaw in narrative structure, Gabriel Churchkitten was still a (mostly) engaging story, paired with simply delightful artwork. Readers who enjoyed Graham Oakley's series of picture-books about a group of mice (and a cat!) who live in a church (The Church Mouse, The Church Cat Abroad, etc.), will also enjoy this earlier series, I think!
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Although this book is quite old, it is a fun read nonetheless. Trumpet the dog, Gabriel the Kitten and Peter the churchmouse are afraid that Parson Pease-Porridge will send them away because of Trumpet's howling. They try all kinds of ways to get him to stop, until finally the realize what the fuss is all about. Simple black and white drawings with expressive animal faces.
A fantastic collection of stories and fables from across the globe. I have been reading these stories daily with my son and he loves them.

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Statistics

Works
27
Also by
3
Members
573
Popularity
#43,719
Rating
4.1
Reviews
3
ISBNs
13
Languages
3

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