. Answer in detail.
1. Why do you think Papaya felt that she had been tricker
2. Do you think Papaya was a good travelling cat'? Explain
in your own words.
Think and answer
Slowly, her back arched, all her hair stood on end, and her ey
plack with horror at what she saw. Do you think Nira and
mave brought Papaya to the houseboat? Discuss.
now your values.
ara and Niren promise to look after Papava on their
Answers
Answer:
Two things that go well together are books about cats and Japanese literature. And that’s what you get with the international bestseller The Travelling Cat Chronicles, which came out in Japan some time ago but is now getting a Canadian release, coinciding with the release of a live action movie of the same name. This book is a strange, but beguiling one — one that cat lovers are bound to lap up. The story — and while I say story, the book is fairly plotless — is about a Japanese man named Satoru who discovers an injured stray cat and takes him on as his own. However, events turn out that Satoru is no longer able to take care of the kitty, named Nana after the Japanese number seven, and so he hits up friends and family to take care of the cat. We don’t learn why Satoru is no longer able to take care of Nana until near the end of the book, and the reason is a heart-wrenching and sentimental one. Expect to be keeping a box of Kleenex at the ready when you read this.
Answer:
1)Since the cat feared of water, so the family had taken papaya on the lake with them where there was water all around without letting it to see. And they were moving, thus, they tricked her.
2)Yes, papaya was a good traveling cat. Inspite of being kept in a woven basket, bumped and carried roughly here and there, she kept sitting without any sound of anger and slept inside the basket.