This magical story weaves a delightful fantasy around a simple and touching story of a lost cat. Mrs Cockle lives at the top of a very tall house which has a useful trap door that opens directly onto the roof. When Mrs Cockle is out at work all day selling balloons she lets her cat Peter out so that he can enjoy the sunshine. One day Peter goes missing and Mrs Cockle sets out on a fantastic journey, including walking on the clouds, to find him and bring him home. Hugely touching it's a story to be enjoyed by parent and child together
or for a child who is just beginning to enjoy more independent reading.
A brilliantly written classic story about an old lady and her
beloved cat. In order to keep her cat Peter in fish, Mrs Cackle sells
balloons on a street corner but one day Peter disappears and, pining
for him Mrs Cackle becomes so frail and thin that one day a puff of
wind blows her and her balloons away up into the sky. Eventually she
lands again but in the most unexpected of places; a boat close to shore
and little does she expect to see someone she knows looking mighty and
proud in the bow of the boat...
Other wonderful classics brought back to life by Jane Nissen Books include:
“This is a brilliant piece of writing... a little gem of a book. All Pearce’s books have this strange, unobtrusive power. They seem like simple fantasy or adventure stories, but somehow they never leave you.” - Frank Cottrell Boyce
Author
About Philippa Pearce
Philippa Pearce spent her childhood in Great Shelford, a village near Cambridge, and was the youngest of four children of a flour-miller and corn-merchant. The village, the river, and the countryside in which she lived appear more or less plainly in Minnow on the Say, and Tom's Midnight Garden.
Philippa later went on to study English and History at Cambridge University. She worked for the BBC as a scriptwriter and producer, and then in publishing as an editor. She has written many books including the Modern Classic, Tom's Midnight Garden, for which she won the Carnegie Medal. She has been awarded the OBE for services to Children's Literature. Sadly, Philippa died in 2006, at the age of 86.