Yowler, a rough-looking yellow cat, belongs to the baker who lives further down the street. Mother and Aunt Tabby do not want Jazbury to play with Yowler because they think he is a very coarse, noisy cat.
This book tells of their adventures and how they became lost in the woods. It tells of some scary moments and, how, after many days hunting for food and enduring long, cold, wet nights, they desperately want to find their way home but they are afraid they are hopelessly lost.
Do they find they way home? Well, you’ll have to download this story and find out for yourself!
KEYWORDS/TAGS: fairy tales, folklore, myths, legends, children’s stories, children’s stories, bygone era, fairydom, fairy land, classic stories, children’s bedtime stories, fables, Adventures, Aunt Tabby, Wonder Stories, Jazbury, Kitten, three, Fluffy, Yowler, Mother Bunch, Tabby, kitten, mewed, miaow, meow, fence, mouse, wash, woods, cat, rat, dog, tail, bird, morning, hole, Sarah, buggy, mice, weeds, black, dirty, Miss, sleep, white, rub, whisper, crouch, cupboard, jump, corner, sunny, lady, answer, street, cellar, garden, hollow, crept, creep, boy, run, wash, dusty, Momma, dark, night, wet, soap, , scratching, laugh, trot, wicked, purr, wild, girl, lost, neighbourhood, grasshoppers, mouse-hole
Katharine Pyle (1863 – 1938) was an American artist, poet, and children's writer.
Born in Wilmington, Delaware, the youngest offspring of William Pyle and Margaret (Painter), she was the sister of author and artist Howard Pyle. She was educated at the Women's Industrial School and the Drexel Institute, then studied at the Philadelphia School of Design for Women and the New York Art Students' League. She lived in Wilmington her whole life, except four years in New York during the 1890s.
Her art was exhibited at the World's Columbian Exposition in 1893. She found work as an illustrator no later than 1895, but her first major success occurred in 1898 with The Counterpane Fairy. Over the course of her career she wrote over 30 books and illustrated the works of others. Her works appeared in the Ladies' Home Journal and Harper's Bazaar. The Delaware Art Museum now has a substantial collection of her manuscripts.