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review 2018-09-16 18:00
13 Square
The Guest Cat - Takashi Hiraide,Eric Selland

 This is more a series of short stories/essays about more than one cat. The narrator and his wife are not cat people and slowly become so.

It is not particularly gripping, but it is a good cat story. So if you like cats, it is worth reading. Just be warned - pet death.

 

 

I also read Lucky Cat #1 for the 13 square.  That is a very short story, 13 pages, about  a stolen black cat.  No pet death in that one.  It was sweet.

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review 2014-11-20 11:51
The Guest Cat - Takashi Hiraide,Eric Selland

I received a copy of this book from the publishers and this is my honest opinion of the book.

 

A couple reside in a rented property in the suburbs in Japan. They are meandering through life when suddenly a cat, adopted by neighbours begins to visit their house. As the cat works its way into their hearts and home she has an effect on their lives in other ways.

 

This is a short novella, only 136 pages long. There is a mystical almost whimsical feel to the story as the unnamed narrator tells us about Chibi the cat and how she motivates him and his wife. He notices changes taking place, neither of them being cat lovers, his wife starts to make a bed for the visitor, feeding her and leaving the door open to ensure she can visit whenever she likes. The cat inspires the narrator to make changes in his own life.

 

The author is also a poet and this shows in the writing. Short chapters of two or three pages appear to convey little but the story soon grows on you much like the cat. There is no big plot line, just a gentle meander through the lives of a Japanese couple. A charming little story.

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review 2014-10-17 13:03
It's a Japanese book about a cat, I'm going to be biased - The Guest Cat by Takashi Hiraide
The Guest Cat - Takashi Hiraide,Eric Selland

[This book was provided to me for zero pennies by the publisher, Picador, their button-pressing approval made possible by NetGalley. Wren and I thank them profusely.]

 

The Guest Cat is an odd little book. It is a fairly simple novella about a Tokyo couple who gradually become a second family to a neighbour's cat they call Chibi. Rather unfortunately, it feels as though something large has been lost in translation with this one. 

 

I'm loath to point the finger at the translator - not least because the last time I did that person wrote an Amazon review explaining how I'd read the book wrong - but this does read as though it's quite a literal translation. 

 

Another one of Chibi's characteristics was that she changed the direction of her cautious attention frequently.

 

It's not constant by any means, and it doesn't render the book as unreadable as that isolated sentence suggests, but it's certainly a problem. Translating literary books demands rare skills anyway; translating from Japanese (which has so much particular vocabulary and a culture completely different from the West) ... well, I can't imagine it's easy. It also raises the question of what a translator should do - should they be extensively rewriting or merely reporting what is written? Who should decide if that sentence should be "Chibi found many things to be cautious about" or "Chibi rarely relaxed"?

 

There is a difference between a poetic statement and one which is overwritten. I didn't feel the translation always got that right. When it's good it's delicate, stepping lightly through the simplicity of the tale, but when it's not it's that quote, or it's contradicting itself, or it's starting threads which are never returned to and generally leaving me slightly confused.

 

There are some notes/footnotes from the translator which are illuminating enough for me to wish either they, or an expert in Japanese Literature, had written an introduction. I would feel the benefit of having this explained to me a bit.

 

On a personal level, I found this a very interesting book. There are protracted descriptions of the house which I found fascinating but which others may well find tedious. The narrator's engagement with Chibi is the typical monologue of the cat enthusiast; the reader's mileage will vary according to their meatworld keeness for this. 

 

Although I'm giving this three stars I can't honestly say I'd recommend it. I'm in that weird situation where I'm reading other, more positive reviews, agreeing with them totally, but not actually making that connection myself. I do very much feel that it's me who hasn't got it, rather than there being nothing to get. There are certainly shades of something, but even with the benefit of a few days rumination, I couldn't actually tell you what. 

 

3 stars.

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review 2014-06-11 00:00
The Guest Cat
The Guest Cat - Takashi Hiraide,Eric Selland Subtle and sad little story that stretches out from the couple and the neighbors' cat at the center of the it into the isolation of so much of life--in Japan and everywhere.

To be read mindfully; then go hug your cat.
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