Fracture history tales : a satirical relook at the holidays American celebrate, revealing their true feline-inspired origins /

Inspired by Jay Ward's animated "Fractured Fairy Tales" series of the early 1960s, "Fractured History Tales" takes a satirical relook at the holidays Americans celebrate, revealing their true feline-inspired origins, woven with modern themes for adults. These 13 short essays...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Arnold, Lee, 1959- (Author)
Language:English
Published: Philadelphia, Pa. : Lee Arnold, [2021]
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Summary: Inspired by Jay Ward's animated "Fractured Fairy Tales" series of the early 1960s, "Fractured History Tales" takes a satirical relook at the holidays Americans celebrate, revealing their true feline-inspired origins, woven with modern themes for adults. These 13 short essays (spanning 2016 to 2018) cover the real influences of cats throughout history--the brains behind the humans who usually receive all the credit. These include Raquel, who accompanied Columbus to the New World; a Wampanoag's cat, Francine, who was at the first Thanksgiving; Martha Washington's cat Electra--a gift from Ben Franklin; Lief Erikson's Olaf, at the Vikings' landing in Newfoundland; James Buchanan's Rufus, as they leave the White House heading back to Lancaster; Queen Liliʻuokalani's Skippy during the 1893 coup; Betsy Ross' Stitch and others--including topics dealing with labor history, the Boer War and historic house interpreters. The origins of this series began as a sly, personnel trick (to get work colleagues to read my emails about holiday building closures--to keep them from setting off the alarms) and turned into a tradition that lasted two years--and had an audience beyond the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. The cats in these tales are neither cuddly nor sinister. They think, they connive, they manipulate, are (generally) loyal, but mostly do what cats do: put themselves first. Perhaps that is how it should be.
Physical Description: 1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 28 cm