Books for Cat Lovers

Montessori Thrive • February 14, 2022

There’s an old idea that we are all either dog people or cat people. While that may absolutely be the case for some of us, many of us love them both. Some of the most devoted cat lovers we’ve ever met used to say they would never have one. Cats have a way of purring their way into our hearts.

This month’s book list is for you cat lovers (don’t worry dog people - we’ve got you next month). There are SO many books for children to choose from, but we weeded through and selected some of the very best for infants right on up through teenagers. We are completely charmed by every single book on this list, and we think you will be, too.

Bonus idea: We know these are all very big ifs , but if your cat is in the mood, can sit still, and they don’t get distracted by that imaginary mouse they’re convinced just ran by, you might invite your cat to be part of the reading. Enjoy!


Board Books

Black Cat, White Cat by Silvia Borando

Black Cat is completely black and only goes out during the day. White Cat is completely white, and only goes out during the night. That is, until curiosity gets the best of them, and they decide to stray from their routines. They meet, and take each other on beautiful adventures exploring everything the other has missed.

ABC Cats by Lesléa Newman, illustrated by Isabella Kung

There are so many options when it comes to alphabet books; this cat version is adorable and engaging. The details in the illustrations will make kids giggle - Dreaming Cat has drool dripping out of its mouth and Finicky Cat knocks its food dish over with a flourish. Love this book? Newman and Kung have created another title together: 123 Cats.


Picture Books

I Am a Cat by Galia Bernstein

Poor little Simon announces to the Lion, Cheetah, Panther, Tiger, and Puma that he is a cat. They all laugh and try to convince him he couldn’t possibly be. Luckily, Simon is patient and points out their similarities. This book ends sweetly, with the cats enjoying each other's company and doing what all cats do best.

Cats by Gail Gibbons

This may not be a new book, but it sure holds up well. Gibbons takes the concept of a picture book and has a knack for squeezing in a whole lot of nonfiction. Her gorgeously illustrated cats find their way into diagrams, poses that help readers understand their behavior, and even a litter of kittens growing up!

Cat Problems by Jory John, illustrated by Lane Smith

The life of a pet cat is full of inconveniences - at least that’s what the cat in this book thinks. Why can’t the sun just stay still? How does one manage to get through the window to eat that noisy squirrel? Why does that other cat keep sitting in all the best spots? Ugh. Life is so rough!

They All Saw A Cat

Life is about perspective, right? This 2017 Caldecott Honor Book gives readers a charming peek at how one little cat can be seen in many different ways. As it walks through the world, a child sees it with large eyes and a smile, the fish sees a watery blur of yellow eyes, the mouse sees an exaggerated frightening beast, and the flea sees an expanse of fur. When a cat looks at its own reflection, imagine what it sees?


Early Readers and First Chapter Books

Mr. Putter & Tabby Pour the Tea by Cythia Rylant, illustrated by Authur Howard

The first in a delightful series, this book tells the story of how Mr. Putter and Tabby came to meet. Mr. Putter has a lovely life, but he feels lonely and wishes he had someone to share it with. He decides he needs a cat. A trip to the shelter brings him face to face with an aging orange and white cat, who seems to remind him a bit of himself. The two go on to eat English muffins together, sing opera together, and appreciate one another’s company.

Kitty and the Twilight Trouble by Paula Harrison, illustrated by Jenny Lovelie

“Girl by day. Cat by night. Ready for adventure.” This is book six, the most recently published in a much-loved series. Kitty can see in the dark. She can hear sounds from miles away. She can easily turn three somersaults in a row and land on her feet. This is all because she has cat superpowers, and actually turns into one at night. She and her cat crew run into some trouble at the carnival, and of course Kitty tries to save the day.


Graphic Novels

Cat & Cat Adventures: The Quest for Snacks by Susie Yi

The first in a series, this adorable graphic novel is written with children 6-10 in mind. Squash and Ginny make it their mission to find more snacks, and the best way to do this is by creating a special magic snack potion. They accidentally go through a portal into a magical world, making friends, meeting challenges, and finding adventures in a strange world. There’s also a nice side theme of putting our wants aside to make sure others have their needs met.

The Complete Chi's Sweet Home by Konami Kanata

A tiny kitten accidentally separates from her family while out on a walk, finding herself as a stray. A kind family takes her in, names her Chi, and the daily entertainment of having a cat as a pet ensues. This is the first of four volumes.


Middle Grade Fiction

Catwings (A Catwings Tale) by Ursula K. Le Guin, illustrated by S. D. Schindler

A classic first published in 1988, this is the first of four books. Somehow four kittens are born with wings. Much to their mother’s delight, who wants them to be able to fly from danger and enjoy a safer life, they eventually do just that. Unfortunately, not everything thinks their special gift is a good thing.

Leonard (My Life as a Cat) by Carlie Sorosiak

Leonard has spent the last 300 hundred years preparing for an epic journey. You see, Leonard is a creature from another planet, and his species celebrates their 300th birthday by visiting Earth for one month in whatever form they choose. He has prepared for his brief appearance as a human for as long as he can remember, but something goes wrong during the journey, and he finds himself landing in a tree, in a storm, as a cat. His adventures are anything but ordinary, and far from what he expected.


Young Adult Books

Tiny But Mighty: Kitten Lady's Guide to Saving the Most Vulnerable Felines by Hannah Shaw

Shaw is best known as the Kitten Lady on YouTube where she helps people learn how to help foster kittens. This book is an extension of that work, and adorable photos accompany her tips and instructions on how to help these sweet little creatures. A perfect book for any adolescent (or adult) animal lover, it’s hard not to love this one.

The Cat I Never Named: A True Story of Love, War, and Survival by Amra Sabic-el-Rayess, with Laura L. Sullivan

This biography was a finalist for the Excellence In Young Adult Nonfiction award by the YALSA-ALA. Detailing Sabic-el-Rayess’ experience as a Muslim teenager in Bosnia in 1992, she and her community are faced with war and persecution. Somehow, in the midst of it all, she finds a stray cat. After unsuccessfully attempting to forget about the cat, they end up saving one another.

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And research backs this up. Studies have found that physical activity improves cognition, judgment, memory, and social reasoning. Moving the body isn't a break from learning. Rather, the movement is often the learning (and this is even more so for younger children!). Montessori materials are designed to be touched, carried, sorted, and manipulated. Children working with the knobbed cylinder blocks are actively perceiving, making judgments, and reasoning through their hands. The same is true when children sort fabric squares by texture, shake and compare sound cylinders, or lay out bead bars to represent quantities. Every material helps children integrate their minds and bodies. Practical life activities take this even further. When children learn to pour, button, fold, or prepare food, they are engaging in organized sequences of purposeful action that develop concentration and executive function skills. What the Research Shows A Milwaukee study found that high school students who had previously attended Montessori programs significantly outperformed peers on math and science assessments, subjects that rely heavily on the kind of reasoning that, in Montessori, is first built through hands-on materials. PRINCIPLE TWO: Choice Improves Both Learning and Well-Being The freedom to choose is at the heart of Montessori education, but this isn’t just about enjoyment. Having choice measurably affects how well children learn and how they feel about themselves. In a striking series of studies, children aged seven to nine were given anagram puzzles to solve. Those who chose their own category of puzzle solved twice as many as children whose category had been chosen for them, even though the actual puzzles were identical. Those who had a choice also spent far more time voluntarily working on puzzles during free time. The key finding is that the perception of control (even in small things) activates a fundamentally different relationship to the work. Children who feel in control tend to engage more deeply, persist longer, and take more ownership of their learning. In a Montessori classroom, children choose their own work throughout the day. Importantly, Dr. Lillard notes that this freedom is always paired with responsibility, and that too many choices can be as demotivating as none. The Montessori environment offers meaningful, bounded choice. Rather than an overwhelming array, each classroom has a selection of purposeful materials designed to match children’s developmental readiness. Choice and concentration are closely connected, too. When children choose work that genuinely engages them, they're far more likely to reach a deep state of focus, or what psychologists call a “flow state.” PRINCIPLE THREE: Children Learn Best When They're Genuinely Interested This sounds obvious, of course! It makes sense that we learn better when we are interested. However, think about this in terms of how classrooms are typically structured. If interest is one of the most powerful drivers of learning, then organizing a school day around a single curriculum delivered to the whole class at once works against almost every child in the room. Dr. Montessori understood children's interests as biological signals pointing toward what their developing minds most need to engage with at that moment in their lives. These windows of opportunity, or "sensitive periods,” are particular stretches of development during which children are uniquely primed to absorb certain kinds of learning. During these windows, learning that matches the child's inner readiness can be extraordinarily effortless and lasting. The role of interest is why Montessori materials are designed to be beautiful, engaging, and self-correcting. The sensorial materials, for example, aren't only teaching discrimination of size or color. They are designed to help children become more interested in noticing the world around them. The adult’s role is to observe carefully and offer new lessons at the moment a child's interest is most alive. PRINCIPLE FOUR: Rewards Undermine the Motivation They're Meant to Build Offering children external rewards (e.g., stickers, prizes, praise for being smart) for activities they already enjoy reliably reduces their intrinsic motivation to do those things later. What the Research Shows Researchers identified preschoolers who loved drawing with markers. They then told one group they would receive a "Good Player Award" for drawing (a fancy certificate with a gold star). Weeks later, the children who had expected the reward used the markers far less than they had before, and half as much as children who had never been offered a reward at all. Expecting a reward had turned something they loved into something they did for a prize. And when the prize was gone, so was much of the pleasure. Rewards like sticker charts, gold stars, and even grades and honor rolls, shift children’s relationship to learning from "I do this because it interests me" to "I do this to get the reward." When the reward is taken away, children’s inner drive has often already weakened. In Montessori classrooms, feedback comes through the work itself, which includes many self-correcting materials, so children discover their own errors without external judgment. The goal is to keep children's relationship to learning intrinsic, personal, and durable. This doesn't mean feedback is absent, though! What matters is the kind of feedback. Research by psychologist Carol Dweck found that praising children for effort (e.g., "you worked really hard on that”) produces dramatically better outcomes than praising ability (e.g., “you’re so smart”). 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