The Backstory

A wonderful world of wordplay

Laura Bontje stands smiling while holding a long-haired kitten.

Photography by Geoff Robins

Was It a Cat I Saw? is a lively and unusual children鈥檚 picture book about a young girl who helps a friend find a missing pet 鈥 Wait, did you catch that?

Read the title again. Now try reading it backwards. 

See it?

The title is a palindrome 鈥 a word or phrase that reads the same back to front 鈥 and it is one of many used throughout the first published children鈥檚 picture book by Laura (Herdman) Bontje, Artsci鈥11.

鈥淚 have just always loved wordplay of all kinds and the mechanics of language,鈥 explains Ms. Bontje from her home in London, Ont. 鈥淢y mom鈥檚 a really big reader and my dad gave me this love for puns and dad jokes 鈥 all the ways we can use words to entertain really fascinate me.鈥

Now an editor, Ms. Bontje developed a love of wordplay at an early age when she discovered that 鈥渂ookkeeper鈥 is one of the only English words that has three sets of double letters in a row. Her first encounter with a palindrome involved Napoleon: Able was I ere I saw Elba. She likely didn鈥檛 have much knowledge about the French emperor at that age: the wordplay was what fascinated her. Years later, when she was completing a degree in English at Queen鈥檚, she was again drawn to linguistics.

In her third year, she volunteered for a linguistics lab that was testing kids鈥 pronunciation of nonsense words. Researchers noticed that they would read them using the same rules of English even though the words were made up. It demonstrated, she says, that we intuitively understand certain conventions of our language.

Telling a story with palindromes was Ms. Bontje鈥檚 original idea for Was It a Cat I Saw? 鈥 an idea that began during the pandemic after she had been laid off from her job and found herself at home with her two kids. One day the name Hannah popped into her mind and she recalls thinking, 鈥淗ey, that鈥檚 kind of fun. That鈥檚 a palindrome.鈥

Her original concept was to write an entire book, line for line, that could be read forwards and backwards. She struggled with that concept, she admits, and eventually shifted gears to having Hannah speak in palindromes. 鈥淔rom there, everything just fell into place.鈥

When a friend鈥檚 cat, Otto, goes missing, Hannah and her friend head off on an adventure around their neighbourhood to find him. Italian artist Emma Lidia Squillari鈥檚 beautiful watercolour illustrations and a notable lack of technology give the story a timeless quality, while Ms. Bontje鈥檚 narrative weaves a tale about exploration and discovery around palindromes, which are highlighted throughout.

By focusing on palindromes, Ms. Bontje鈥檚 picture book highlights creativity and the 鈥渋nfinite number of things we can do with language. It鈥檚 an opportunity to introduce children to something they may not have encountered before,鈥 she says. 鈥淢aybe the average kid doesn鈥檛 notice [palindromes], but I know somewhere out there, there鈥檚 a kid sitting in a classroom who has discovered palindromes for the first time and thinks they鈥檙e the coolest thing.鈥

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