Mog (Judith Kerr)

Mog is a fictional character in a series of children's books written by Judith Kerr. Other regularly occurring characters include Mr and Mrs Thomas (Mog's owners) and their two children Nicky and Debbie. In each book Mog gets into a different conundrum with a new character or event. Unusually for a popular children's series, Mog dies in the final book, 2002's Goodbye, Mog.[1][2]

Mog on the cover of the first book

Kerr based her illustrations of the house in which the family live on her own family home in Barnes, London, and the two children were named after the middle names of her own son and daughter, Matthew and Tacy.[3] The family name "Thomas" is from the first name of her husband, Nigel Kneale, upon whom the appearance of Mr Thomas was based.[3]

In November 2015, Mog returned as a CGI character for the Christmas advert for supermarket Sainsbury's.[4][5] In Mog's Christmas Calamity Mog accidentally starts a fire in her home after having a bad dream, but is able to alert the fire brigade (as she had called 999 when scrabbling across a phone); she is hailed a hero for saving her owners, and (after her owners' neighbours pool their resources to undo the damage she had done, in reference to Sainsbury's "Christmas is for sharing" tagline) is later given an egg as a treat. Kerr herself appears in this advert as a neighbour of the Thomas family. A special plush Mog and book version of the story were sold exclusively through Sainsbury's, with all profits being donated to Save the Children's child literacy work.[5][6][7]

"Mog" is a short form of moggy, this is a word for cat that is not a specific breed.

Publications

Titles include (with year of first publication):

  • Mog the Forgetful Cat (1970)
  • Mog's Christmas (1976)
  • Mog and the Baby (1980)
  • Mog in the Dark (1983)
  • Mog and Me (1984)
  • Mog's Family of Cats (1985)
  • Mog's Amazing Birthday Caper (1986)
  • Mog and Bunny (1988)
  • Mog and Barnaby (also known as Look Out, Mog, 1991)
  • Mog on Fox Night (1993)
  • Mog in the Garden (1994)
  • Mog's Kittens (1994)
  • Mog and the Granny (1995)
  • Mog and the Vee Ee Tee (1996)
  • Mog's Bad Thing (2000)
  • Goodbye, Mog (2002)
  • Mog's Christmas Calamity (2015)[4][5]
gollark: Four-dimensional.
gollark: All decent games use 4D graphics these days.
gollark: (possibly python)
gollark: What happened to "hurr durr me make game using only win32 API"?
gollark: gameengineenginegameengine

References

  1. Kate Kellaway (2002-11-07). "Review: Goodbye Mog by Judith Kerr | Books". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2013-07-30.
  2. Dina Rabinovitch (2005-11-03). "Why Mog had to die | Books". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2013-07-30.
  3. Murray, Andy (2006). Into the Unknown: The Fantastic Life of Nigel (paperback). London: Headpress. p. 110. ISBN 1-900486-50-4.
  4. Sweney, Mark (12 November 2015). "Raiding the kitty: Sainsbury's resurrects Mog the cat for Christmas advert". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 September 2019.
  5. Emily Drabble; Judith Kerr (1 December 2015). "Judith Kerr's Mog's Christmas Calamity – in pictures". Retrieved 25 September 2019.
  6. Matilda Battersby (16 November 2015). "Sainsbury's Christmas Advert 'Mog's Christmas Calamity': Why Judith Kerr Deserves a Medal". Independent UK. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
  7. "Sainsbury's resurrects disaster-prone Mog the cat for new Christmas book, ad (VIDEO)". Malay Mail Online. 15 November 2015. Retrieved 25 November 2015.


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