![]() Her living-room furniture is white and green 70s, as expected, though the television is widescreen and expensive. In Kerr's home in south London, there is light in all the stairwells. It would be an unusual thing to do to an adult - like allowing Jeeves to succumb to cancer - but it is remarkable for it to be done to the age group just beginning to read. Except that this time round, Mog goes to heaven. Nothing in this world has changed (Kerr says cats look the same when dying as they do all their adult lives). The 70s furniture is still in place, the Thomas family as fresh-minted as in the first Mog, which came out in 1970, two years after Kerr's other enduring classic, The Tiger Who Came to Tea. Retrieved 25 November 2015.Inside, the pictures - as always, drawn by the author, each stripe in Mog's fur a multitude of carefully inked horizontal lines - have not aged.
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