Draft:A Mouse Called Junction

A Mouse Called Junction is a 1980 children's picture book by Julia Cunningham, with illustrations by Michael Hague. About a young mouse who ventures into the forest in search of emotions and is adopted by a rat, it received mixed reviews that praised Hague's illustrations but criticized the text and ending.

Synopsis
Junction, the youngest mouse in his family, lives a cozy life without having ever experienced emotions. One day, he leaves his home for the first time in search of them, and in doing so, encounters the dangers of the forest. When an owl carries him off, he is rescued by a rat whom the forest animals warn is a threat, but comes to adopt him and treats him like a prince.

Themes
In The New York Times, Natalie Babbitt wrote: "Perhaps the point of the book is this: Test things out for yourself instead of accepting ready-made opinions. Maybe. But the fact that it can be read in two such different ways is surely significant."

Reception
Reviews for A Mouse Called Junction were mixed. The School Library Journal criticized the text for its "surprising illogic and insensitivity", along with its ending, at the expense of Hague's "rich, detailed, darkly mysterious" watercolor work. Ruth M. Stein of Language Arts expressed similar feelings, as did Babbitt. "There is something disturbing about this story," the latter wrote, "something vaguely kinked in the suggestion that there is pleasure in discomfort.... And the richness of Julia Cunningham's language only compounds the problem." Conversely, The Reading Teacher said, "The beauty of the language and the full-page illustrations make this [story] a winner."