The Mavericks Tales characters are hiding... can you find them? The Great Purr-suit isn’t your average puzzle book. Forget boring black and white sketches, this is a Visual Experience . We’ve dropped Maverick the Cat and his squad into stunning, high quality worlds that look just like your child’s favorite animated films. The Mission is Simple: Every page is a picture of a new world, from deep space to wild jungles to construction sites. Hidden inside the chaos are your four favorite heroes: Maverick, Sunny, Cooper, and Piper. Your child’s job? Find them all. But wait, there's more! We’ve packed these pages with hundreds of funny details, secret items, and hidden surprises. Your child will want to stare at the page for hours. Why Parents Love It: Less Screen Time: Kids love to sit and stare at these puzzle books. It prevents them from staring at screens! - Reading Training in Disguise: The way your kid scans a page to find "Maverick the Cat" is the exact same brain process used to memorize a sight word. It strengthens their reading muscles! - Easy Link to Sight Words: Don't just let the young reader find the character and move on. Use that moment to bridge the gap. When they find Sunny, you say, "Yes! Ssss-Sunny! SSSS. Essss. What letter does Sunny start with?" You hook the phonics into the game. Why Kids Love It: It Feels Like a Movie: The first step to reading isn't memorizing words. It's getting your kid to want to open a book. Kids want to open these seek and find puzzle books. - The Thrill of the Hunt: There is nothing better than the moment they finally shout, "FOUND IT!" Confidence is key, and these seek and find books build confidence in early readers. - Funny Details: The more they look, the more cool stuff they see. What’s Inside: 24 Premium Full-Color Pages: Printed on heavy, high gloss paper that brings the art to life. - The Full Squad: Maverick, Sunny, Cooper, and Piper are hidden in every single scene. - Zero Frustration: Challenging enough to be fun, but clear enough for ages 3 - 8 to succeed. Get the book that turns "Focus" into Fun. Scroll up and click "Add to Cart" today! Q: What exactly is a "Seek and Find" puzzle? Dane: Think of it as the ultimate game of hide and seek, but on paper. We take a high-quality, artistic scene, like a busy space station, a wild jungle, or a construction site, and hide our characters (Maverick, Sunny, Cooper, and Piper) inside the chaos. Your child's job is to scan the page, filter out the distractions, and find the squad. There are no words to read yet, just pure focus and the thrill of the hunt. Q: I see "Seek and Find" and I think "just a game." Does this actually help with reading? Dane: It sounds counterintuitive, right? But the first step to reading isn't memorizing words: it's getting your child to want to open a book. If they hate books, the battle is lost before you begin. But scientifically? Yes. The way a child scans a page to find "Maverick the Cat" uses the exact same brain process (Visual Imprinting) required to memorize a sight word. Think of these puzzles as 'cardio for the eyes' before they have to play the actual sport of reading. Q: Okay, so they find the cat. How does that turn into reading a word? Dane: This is where the parent comes in. We call it "The Bridge." When your child points to Sunny and shouts "Found her!", you simply ask: "Yes! Ssss-Sunny! What letter does Sunny start with?" You hook the phonics into the fun. They are already engaged and happy, that is the perfect moment to slip in a mini lesson without the resistance you get from flashcards. Q: You have two types of books. Which one should I start with? Dane: If you have a reluctant reader or a younger child (3 - 5), start with the Seek & Find books ( The Great Purr-suit ). Get them hooked on the characters and the feeling of "winning" when they find an object. Once they know the squad, introduce the Sight Word Adventure books ( Time Warp ). They will see the same characters they love, but now we are highlighting words in bold colors to help them transfer that visual focus into reading text. Q: My 5 year old thinks "baby books" are uncool. Will they actually like this? Dane: That is exactly why we use these art styles. We didn't want this to look like a school workbook; we wanted it to look like a movie. Cooper is the "cool older kid," and the scenes are high action. We find that kids who think they are "too big" for picture books still love the challenge of the puzzles because it feels like a game on paper. I didn't set out to be an author; I set out to solve a problem for my own daughters. We were stuck in a frustrating gap: the activity books that were actually educational were cheap and boring, while the digital games they loved were over-stimulating and addictive. I decided we didn't have to choose. I decided to combine them. To create The Great Purr-suit , I took the classic "Seek and Find" mechanic and wrapped it in a layer