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The tale of fatty coon
Paperback

The tale of fatty coon

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Fatty Coon was so fat and round that he looked like a ball of fur, with a plumelike tail for a handle.But if you looked at him closely you would have seen a pair of very bright eyes watching you.Fatty loved to eat. Yes-he loved eating better than anything else in the world. That was what madehim so fat. And that, too, was what led him into many adventures.Close by a swamp, which lay down in the valley, between Blue Mountain and Swift River, FattyCoon lived with his mother and his brother and his two sisters. Among them all there was whatgrown people call a strong family resemblance, which is the same thing as saying that they alllooked very much alike. The tail of each one of them-mother and children too-had six blackrings around it. Each of them had a dark brown patch of fur across the face, like a mask. And-what do you think?-each of them, even Fatty and his brother and his sisters, had a stiff, whitemoustache!Of course, though they all looked so much alike, you would have known which was Mrs. Coon, forshe was so much bigger than her children. And you would have known which was Fatty-he was somuch rounder than his brother and his sisters.Mrs. Coon’s home was in the hollow branch of an old tree. It was a giant of a tree-a poplar closeby a brook which ran into the swamp-and the branch which was Mrs. Coon’s home was as big asmost tree-trunks are.Blackie was Fatty’s brother-for the mask on his face was just a little darker than the others’. Fluffywas one of Fatty’s sisters, because her fur was just a little fluffier than the other children’s. AndCutey was the other sister’s name, because she was so quaint.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Ross & Perry
Country
United States
Date
15 October 2002
Pages
128
ISBN
9781932080452

Fatty Coon was so fat and round that he looked like a ball of fur, with a plumelike tail for a handle.But if you looked at him closely you would have seen a pair of very bright eyes watching you.Fatty loved to eat. Yes-he loved eating better than anything else in the world. That was what madehim so fat. And that, too, was what led him into many adventures.Close by a swamp, which lay down in the valley, between Blue Mountain and Swift River, FattyCoon lived with his mother and his brother and his two sisters. Among them all there was whatgrown people call a strong family resemblance, which is the same thing as saying that they alllooked very much alike. The tail of each one of them-mother and children too-had six blackrings around it. Each of them had a dark brown patch of fur across the face, like a mask. And-what do you think?-each of them, even Fatty and his brother and his sisters, had a stiff, whitemoustache!Of course, though they all looked so much alike, you would have known which was Mrs. Coon, forshe was so much bigger than her children. And you would have known which was Fatty-he was somuch rounder than his brother and his sisters.Mrs. Coon’s home was in the hollow branch of an old tree. It was a giant of a tree-a poplar closeby a brook which ran into the swamp-and the branch which was Mrs. Coon’s home was as big asmost tree-trunks are.Blackie was Fatty’s brother-for the mask on his face was just a little darker than the others’. Fluffywas one of Fatty’s sisters, because her fur was just a little fluffier than the other children’s. AndCutey was the other sister’s name, because she was so quaint.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Ross & Perry
Country
United States
Date
15 October 2002
Pages
128
ISBN
9781932080452