Review: The Writer's Cats

In 2008, French author Muriel Barbery burst onto the literary scene with The Elegance of the Hedgehog, a lyrical, richly imagined novel about a Parisian apartment building concierge and a precocious 12-year-old tenant. Both lead lives of quiet desperation. In the years since, Barbery has continued to deliver stories (A Strange Country) featuring her distinctive blend of gentle satire and magical realism, and continues to win global readership.

In The Writer's Cats, Barbery launches her most playful story yet, focusing on herself and unraveling the "mysterious, confounding" life of a writer. This short, frisky novel is told from the imagined perspective of one of her beloved cats, Kirin--named for the Japanese beer. The four-year-old "fatal beauty" is one of a quartet of Barbery's felines, who all believe they are her esteemed protectors and literary advisers. The tribe includes three other Chartreux cats, with gray fur and orange eyes, which pair perfectly with the décor of the author's Parisian home. This color scheme is further emphasized in whimsical illustrations and visual wit by Maria Guitart.

Kirin's endearing narrative voice encapsulates the story of the author's literary ascendancy and shares glimpses of her day-to-day life, while also touching upon Barbery's relationships with her husband, friends and confidantes. Kirin proclaims how the "writer would not be the writer she is" without the love, companionship and cleverly orchestrated and deployed deviousness of the cats. Every member of the four-legged crew aids and abets the author--who is an often exasperating, obsessive perfectionist--as she lives out a creative life riddled with restlessness, doubt and denial.

The cats are named in homage to the Japanophile in Barbery: eight-year-old Ocha is a lazy softie who purrs and meows like a kitten. This alpha cat is also a gourmand who would "kill for a mere crumb of paté." Ocha's petite sister, Mizu--loyal, yet territorial--was born with a physical anomaly that makes her look like an "inclined plane" in profile. Her gentle cunning casts a spell on the author. And Petrus, Kirin's amiable undaunted brother, loves flowers and "always looks on the bright side."

The distinct charms of the four cats--along with their tail-waving antics--work together to drive Barbery's writing life and ultimately dictate the direction of her literary pursuits. Creative types of all stripes--especially cat lovers--will be enchanted by Barbery's fun and delightfully philosophical storytelling. --Kathleen Gerard, blogger at Reading Between the Lines

Shelf Talker: The philosophical whimsy of four cats cleverly influences the literary life of acclaimed French author Muriel Barbery.

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