"Banks’s verse narrative is as elegant and lithe as her subject, full of 
poetic descriptions and playful, sophisticated vocabulary. 
“City cat, strutting down the boulevards,
taking in the city sights.
The skyline, pulsing, bathed in light.
An obelisk, a graceful arch,
a gilded bridge, a sprawling park.”
taking in the city sights.
The skyline, pulsing, bathed in light.
An obelisk, a graceful arch,
a gilded bridge, a sprawling park.”
Castillo, who has worked with Banks before, on “That’s Papa’s Way” 
(2009), creates illustrations that are a good match for the author’s 
evocative language. Her street scenes, with all their architectural 
detail, have the intentionally rough, textural look of lino prints, and 
her palette is an attractive and fashionable combination of rich 
neutrals and bright reds and mustard yellows. In all, “City Cat” may 
appeal as much to parents as to children, but there’s no harm in that. 
One advantage human travelers have over beasts: If you have to pack a 
suitcase, you can make room in it for this book as a reminder of why it 
is we go sightseeing in the first place. 
Many thanks to Sarah Harrison Smith for such a lovely, thoughtful write up!
 

 
 
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