Anatole and the Cat

by Eve Titus

Anatole - mouse (2)

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Anatole's job as a taster in a cheese factory is endangered by a marauding cat.

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11 reviews
What better foe for our intrepid French mouse Anatole to face than a mouse’s greatest enemy: a cat! Anatole found the perfect job previously as a cheese taste tester for the Duvale Fromagerie, but life just had to throw him another curveball in the form of a ferocious feline. Well, maybe not so ferocious, since the story never shows the cat actively hunting Anatole and his assistant, but Titus brings across the great fear that Anatole feels quite well to add tension to the story. As per usual, Anatole uses his brains (and does not run away in fear as many mice would) to come up with a creative solution that will keep him safe from Duvale’s cat but not anger Duvale - belling the cat! Once again, Anatole rises above the expected and show more accomplishes what no mouse before has ever done and guarantees his continued success in his chosen profession! show less
Anatole, respected Cheese Taster in France. Anatole and his colleague, Gaston were afraid of cats. To keep his job and continue to support his wife and six children, Anatole need to find a way to deal with their fear of cats.

Read Titus' Anatole and The Cat to learn what happens.

I found it relaxing and fun reading this children's book. Encourages children to consider solutions to problematic situations.

Strong and positive read with good illustrations.
First sentence: In all France there was no mouse more honored or respected than Anatole. He was very proud of his job as Cheese Taster at the factory of M'sieu Duval. Nobody knew that he was not a man but a mouse, not even M'sieu Duval, for he did his work after the others went home.

Premise/plot: Anatole is Vice President in charge of tasting all the cheese. (What a job!) But his job security--and his life--is threatened by the presence of an unexpected cat in the factory. The owner has a cat that is, well, stubborn. Anatole writes M. Duval and tells him the cat must go or he will. If the boss can't keep his cat under control, maybe just maybe Anatole can bell that cat!

My thoughts: These two Anatole books are AWESOME. I really loved show more both books. I adore the illustrations. Highly recommended. show less
This is the second Anatole book, and in this one he outsmarts a cat. The cat is owned by M'sieu Duval and has started to hang around Duval's cheese factory where Anatole works. Anatole almost gives up the job he loves out of fear of the cat, but soon finds a way to outwit his foe.

I enjoyed this Anatole book nearly as much as the first in the series. The first few are the best because they're fairly firmly grounded in an (anthropomorhized) mouse's reality while still being fanciful of course. The rest of the series strays a little off course with Anatole's adventures. But this one is delightful.
½
A 1958 Caldecott Honor book, the illustrations are uniquely rendered with only red, blue and white.

Anatole is a highly successful mouse. He is the head cheese taster at the factory of M'sieu Duval.

Able to provide a good life for his family, he also very much likes his job...Until, a cat shows up and not only threatens Anatole's job, but his life as well.

Anatole had the courage to realize he was important and valued, thus, if he was to stay, the cat had to go!

In the end Anatole "bells the cat." The cat can longer cause fear.
This book, Anatole, is a modern fantasy about a mouse who works as a cheese taster. Anatole, however, becomes disrupted by a cat who is disturbs his work. Anatole knows that he must courageously take down the cat in order to finish his work. Anatole works with bravery to best the cat and save the day.
The story is about a mouse, Anatole, who works at a cheese factory. His work is disturbed by a troublesome cat, but Anatole rises above the cat and even gets a cheese named after himself.

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Caldecott Honor Books
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Cats in Fiction
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Author Information

Picture of author.
25+ Works 4,242 Members
Children's author Eve Titus created the characters of Basil of Baker Street and Anatole. Basil, a mouse private detective in the Victorian age, was the subject of Walt Disney's The Great Mouse Detective. An animated adaptation was also made based on Anatole, a heroic and resourceful French mouse. (Bowker Author Biography)

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Galdone, Paul (Illustrator)

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Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1957
Dedication
For Joanna and Ferencz Galdone and my son Richard, too
First words
In all France there was no mouse more honored or respected than Anatole.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)And he was also the bravest, because -- for thousands of years the mice of the world had talked about belling the cat, but Anatole was the only one who did it!

Classifications

Genres
Children's Books, Picture Books
DDC/MDS
823.91Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-1999
LCC
PZ7 .T543 .ALanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

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Members
397
Popularity
78,671
Reviews
11
Rating
(3.82)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
14
ASINs
6