Still More Books about Cats

The past two years I’ve had biannual specials on cat books. You might think I would have run out of options by now, but not so! Granted, my choices this time are rather light fare: several children’s picture books, two slight gift books, and a few breezy memoirs. But it’s nice to have a fluffy post every now and again, and today’s is in honor of getting past a week of the year I always dread: June 15th is the U.S. tax deadline for citizens living abroad, so I’ve been drowning in forms and numbers. To celebrate getting both my IRS and HMRC tax returns sent off by today, here’s some feline-themed reads to enjoy over a G&T or other summery tipple of your choice.

Alfie likes cat books, too. The stacks are good for scratching one’s cheek against.

 

Seven Bad Cats by Monique Bonneau (2018): “Today I put on my boots and my coat, and seven bad cats jumped into my boat.” This is a terrific little rhyming book that counts up to seven and then back down to one with the help of some stowaway cats and their antics. (They come in colors that cats don’t normally come in, but that’s okay with me.) To start with they are incorrigibly lazy and mischievous, but when disaster is at hand they band together to help the little girl get back to shore safely. If only cats were so helpful in real life! 

 

Macaroni the Great and the Sea Beast by Whitney Childers (2018): Macaroni the cat has an idyllic life by the coast of Maine with his hipster fisherman friend, Sammy. Sometimes he helps steer the fishing boat; sometimes he naps on the deck. But when a fearsome sea beast rears its head from the net one day, Mac is ready to fight back and save the day. From the colorfully nautical endpapers through to the peaceful last page, this is a great picture book for cat lovers to share with the little ones in their lives. 

 

You don’t so often hear blokes talking about their cats, do you? That crazy cat lady stereotype dominates. But Tom Cox has written several memoirs about his life with cats.

In Under the Paw: Confessions of a Cat Man (2008), Cox, who had previously published volumes of his journalism about music and sports, came out as a cat lover. By the end of the book he has SIX CATS, so this was not some passing fad but a deep and possibly worrying obsession. In essays and short list-based asides he traces his history with cats, reveals the wildly different personalities of his current pets, and wittily comments on cat behavior. I especially liked these entries from his “Cat Dictionary”: “ES Pee: The telepathic process that leads a cat to only get properly settled on its owner’s stomach in the moments when that owner is most desperate for the toilet” & “Muzzlewug: The state of bliss created by the perfect friction of an owner’s fingers on a fully extended chin.” 

The Good, the Bad and the Furry (2013) is another fairly entertaining book. Cat owners will recognize the ways in which a pet’s requirements impinge on their lives (but we wouldn’t have it any other way). Cox starts and ends the book with four cats, but – alas – goes down to three for a while in the middle, with visitors upping it to 3.5 sometimes. The Bear, Ralph and Shipley are the stalwarts, with The Bear described as “the only cat I’d ever seen who appeared to be almost permanently on the verge of tears.” He’s melancholy and philosophical, whereas Ralph (who says his own name when he meows) is vain and sullen. “The Ten Catmandments” was my favorite part: “Thou shalt not drink the water put out for thee by thy humans” and “Thou shalt ignore any toy thy human has bought for thee, especially the really expensive ones.” Includes lots of photographs of cats and kittens! 

 

How It Works: The Cat (2016) is a Ladybird pastiche by Jason Hazeley and Joel Morris that we purchased as a bargain book from Aldi; it was published in the USA as The Fireside Book of the Cat. Tongue-in-cheek descriptions sit opposite 1950s-style drawings. Cat owners will certainly get a chuckle from lines like “Dogs have evolved to serve many sorts of human needs. And humans have evolved to serve many sorts of cat food.” (However, “It is a good idea to buy a lot of your cat’s favourite food. That way, you will have something to throw away when she changes her mind.”) Makes a good coffee table book for guests to smile at. 

 

The Old Age of El Magnifico by Doris Lessing (2000): Pure cat lover’s delight. I wasn’t a big fan of Lessing’s Particularly Cats, which is surprisingly unsentimental and even brutal in places. This redresses the balance. It’s the bittersweet story of Butch, her enormous black and white cat, who was known by many additional nicknames including El Magnifico. At the age of 14 he was found to have a cancerous growth in his shoulder, and one entire front leg had to be removed. His habits, and even to an extent his personality, changed after the amputation, and Lessing regretted that she couldn’t let him know it was done for his good. She reflects on her duty towards the cats in her care, and on how pets encourage us to slow our pace and direct our attention fully to the present moment. Work? Chores? Worries? What could really be more important than sitting still and stroking a cat? 

 

The Church Mouse by Graham Oakley: It is not good for a mouse to be alone. Arthur is lonely as the only mouse resident in the village church, but he has an idea: he proposes to the parson that if he will give all the local mice refuge in the church, they’ll undertake minor chores like flower arranging and picking up confetti. It seems like a good arrangement all around, but Sampson the church cat soon tires of the mice’s antics and creates something of a scene during a Sunday service. Luckily, he and the mice still work together to outwit a burglar who comes for the silver. There are quite a lot of words for a very small child to engage with, but older children should enjoy it very much. I find this whole series so charming. This was the first book of the 14, from 1972. 

 

Cats in May by Doreen Tovey (1959): The sequel is just as good as the original (Cats in the Belfry). Along with feline antics we get the adventures of Blondin the squirrel, whom Tovey and her husband adopted before they started keeping Siamese cats. (He was just as destructive as the pets that came after him, but I had to love his fondness for tea.) Solomon and Sheba appear on the BBC and object in the strongest possible terms when Doreen and Charles try to introduce a third Siamese, a kitten named Samson, to the household. The flu, visits from the rector’s grandson, and periodic troubles with their old farmhouse, including a chimney fire, round out this highly amusing story of life with pets. 

 


Not all cat books are winners. Here are two that, alas, I cannot recommend:

 

The Travelling Cat Chronicles by Hiro Arikawa (2017): This is the fable-like story of Satoru, a single man in his early thirties, and his cat, Nana (named for the shape of his tail, which resembles a Japanese 7). Satoru adopted Nana about five years ago when the cat, a local stray, was hit by a car. Now he needs to find a new owner for his beloved pet. No spoilers here, but really, there are only so many reasons why a young man would need to do this, and readers will likely work it out well before the “big reveal” over halfway through. We bounce between Nana’s perspective, which is quite cutely rendered, and third-person flashbacks to Satoru’s sad history. The author spells out and overstates everything. It’s pretty emotionally manipulative. Pet owners will appreciate Nana’s humor and loyalty (“I’m your cat till the bitter end!”), but I felt like I was being brow-beaten into crying – though I didn’t in the end. 

 

I Could Pee on This, Too: And More Poems by More Cats by Francesco Marciuliano (2016): Not a single memorable poem or line in the lot. Seriously. Stick with the original

 

 

My next batch of cat books. Maybe I’ll try to write them up for a Christmas-tide treat.

 

Whether you are a cat lover or not, do any of these books appeal?

20 responses

  1. As you know, I am a huge Church Mouse fan, as were all my children. I’m thinking my grandson will enjoy Seven Bad Cats by Monique Bonneau. And if he doesn’t, I’m thinking I will.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I certainly loved it! I’ve taken to downloading picture books or graphic novels to read on my laptop screen as a break during editing sessions.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Seven Bad Cats is so cute!

    Liked by 1 person

  3. One can never have enough cat books. Other than the wonderful Church Mice, I knew nothing of this selection. Macaroni is a marvellous name for a cat! And Alfie is looking splendid in his modelling pose. Quite proprietorial about his feline tomes 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. All we had to do to make him interested in the photo shoot was pretend to take the books away from him!

      Liked by 1 person

  4. I love the Tovey and Church Mice books. I found the comment about cats being able to read through their bottoms in the Ladybird pastiche hilarious but didn’t like the taxidermy joke at the end. A great post series I am always pleased to see.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Ladybird is a silly little book, but we enjoyed having it on our coffee table over Christmas.

      Liked by 1 person

  5. What a lovely post! I’m still adjusting to life post-Cleo. I just realized it’s the first time I’ve not had a cat since 2001! That’s a long time. Anyway, I always appreciate a good picture book about cats. The day after Cleo passed away, I was at work and processing books coming back from the other branches. A picture book called The Tenth Good Thing About Barney was in the batch and I took it as a sign from Cleo that she was okay! It’s about a little boy coming to terms with the death of his cat and it’s probably the best one of those type of books about pet loss for children. It made me feel good to read it (even through tears.)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Awww! There are so many sweet cat picture books out there. Does your son appreciate them?

      I’ve only been a cat owner myself for four years. My family had cats when I was really little and for a few years while I was in high school (we took my sister’s cat in when she temporarily moved to California). But my husband and I now feel like we will be perpetual cat people.

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  6. What a delightful feature! Cats and books are a combination it’s hard to beat 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  7. I’m a cat lover, but I don’t ever read cat books. I think about reading them, but then I don’t. I’m tempted by Tom Cox – this is the first I’ve heard of him. And I like the sound of Doris Lessing’s book. It’s true that it’s heartbreaking when you can’t explain things to your pets. The only thing I hate about our long camping trips in the summer is that I worry about the cats thinking we’re never coming back!

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    1. I think you might like Tom Cox’s books. I wonder how widely available they are outside the UK? He’s branched into more general countryside writing now — he’s even on the longlist for the Wainwright nature writing prize this year.

      Do you board your cats or get someone to look in on them at home? I comfort myself with the fact that cats have very small brains, so Alfie will get used to his new normal at the cattery quickly, and then immediately slot back into his routines as soon as he gets home.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. We have three cats and a guinea pig (we used to have two guinea pigs), so we get someone to come look in on them everyday when we go away. They’re also indoor/outdoor cats, so they spend a lot of time outside in the summer. But we do board our dog when we can’t take him with us.
        I used to work at a cat hospital that had a section for boarding cats, and they always did fine. 🙂

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    2. I didn’t know you had quite that many pets 😉 It’s good that they can stay at home — that’s the least disruptive thing for them. But I agree that most boarding situations are perfectly fine. I always say to my husband, “he’s got a warm basket, a window to look out of, a litter box and an endless food supply. What more could he need?!”

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      1. And cats are good at sleeping the day away!

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    3. That is very true 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  8. […] knew Tom Cox for his witty books about his many cats, including The Good, the Bad and the Furry. His first foray into fiction was published by Unbound […]

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  9. […] 4/11. Reviews of the Cox, Hay, and Hoffman appeared on the […]

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