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The Guest Cat de Takashi Hiraide

de Takashi Hiraide - Género: English
libro gratis The Guest Cat

Sinopsis

A wonderful sui generis novel about a visiting cat who brings joy into a couple's life in Tokyo

A bestseller in France and winner of Japan's Kiyama Shohei Literary Award, The Guest Cat, by the acclaimed poet Takashi Hiraide, is a subtly moving and exceptionally beautiful novel about the transient nature of life and idiosyncratic but deeply felt ways of living. A couple in their thirties live in a small rented cottage in a quiet part of Tokyo; they work at home, freelance copy-editing; they no longer have very much to say to one another. But one day a cat invites itself into their small kitchen. It leaves, but the next day comes again, and then again and again. Soon they are buying treats for the cat and enjoying talks about the animal and all its little ways. Life suddenly seems to have more promise for the husband and wife — the days have more light and color. The novel brims with new small joys and many moments of staggering poetic beauty, but...


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I'm no expert in literature, but I'd hazard a guess that any problems readers may have with this book are based in cultural differences rather than any literary failings with the book itself. The book is very Japanese in that it focuses/describes one element at a time. Its poetry is in its illustration of people, places, and things, not of events, which is pretty counter to my experience of Western literature. It's so descriptive that at many points I found myself wishing I had an iota of artistic talent to sketch out the grounds of the mansion, guest house, and garden.

The NPR description of this book as a story about a cat who brings an overworked couple together is all wrong, however. I would argue that this book is about the elusiveness of a solution to life's countless mysteries. One can never hope to grab hold of them, only to appreciate them from afar, just the book's protagonists did with Chibi.

Furthermore, one reviewer on Amazon complained that the ending was weak. I strongly disagree: I think the book's ending masterfully illustrates how the passage of time affects us all while providing closure to its readers. Give this book a chance. Put aside your cultural blinders long enough, and you may be pleasantly surprised. 586 s emma2,117 67.1k

my new favorite niche subgenre is japanese literary fiction about cats.

if my family group chat were run through a poetic writing machine, it'd be the dog version of this book.

this is 140 pages of obsession about a pet, which is excessively relatable to anyone who has ever sworn up and down their dog / cat / bird / whatever has a full and inarguable human personality if you just OBSERVE.

this is very lovely-ly written, but felt almost too relatable to me–almost to the point of bland/one note. also i caught myself comparing it to if cats disappeared from the world, which is an impossible standard.

but it was a good time!

bottom line: pets have personalities. that's it.3-stars authors-of-color diverse ...more342 s17 comments Rebecca338 403

"I wonder where it all comes from - this need to go to the place where the body has been laid to rest. It's the need to reconfirm how precious someone was and how irreplaceable, and the desire to reconnect with them on a different plane."

A young couple in their thirties live in a small cottage in a remote part of Tokyo. They live a quiet life, working from home as copy editors. One day, their quiet way of life is unexpectedly and pleasantly interrupted by Chibi, a neighbouring cat. As the cat keeps returning, they quickly become attached and they welcome this new simple joy into their lives. But then things take a turn...

The Guest Cat, is written by acclaimed Japanese poet, Takashi Hiraide and his poetic approach to the narrative definitely comes through. Hiraide carefully describes the seasons, how two people develop their eye for detail, be it the character traits of Chibi the cat or the individual details of the nature around them. He describes the street in which the house stands, the garden with all its plants and animals, and in these details lies the meek and the beautiful. With all the Japanese works I've read so far, the connectivity of things plays such an important role and a certain melancholy always lingers.

This is a story about the fragility of life and how we mourn the loss of those to whom we give our hearts. I adored this book and cannot recommend it highly enough, to everyone. Cat lover or not.

Pure, simple, magic.2023 contemporary-literary the-pool-room ...more207 s Florencia649 2,099

...observation is at its core an expression of love which doesnÂ’t get caught up in sentiment.
Those green eyes glowing in the dark ceaselessly, endowing the cover of this book with a breath of life, a dream of plenitude - those eyes were an irresistible enticement. An immediate move was imperative; The Guest Cat had to be on my shelf. Unfortunately, my expectations were far too great, especially taking into account the fact that one of the ingredients of this plot is supposed to be a couple who no longer have much to say to each other and a cat is a new bond between them. No, no, no; that is not the case. However, I was able to overlook that curious fact because this novella has other qualities that make it a potentially enjoyable read. Hiraide's writing is an ode to the beauty of simplicity.

As an artist meticulously amalgamates the elements of nature with the essential constituents of humanity through the art of ikebana, with the same quiet harmony, carefully selected words interweave with a sensitive and thoughtful outlook on life, creating a luscious prose poem echoing the implacable passage of time.


She would always point out to us the importance of being natural, of being ourselves.
As most Japanese novels I have read, there is an exquisite attention to detail; everything and everyone are depicted with strokes of the most elegant form of poetry in which intimacy, an unusually expressive intimacy is a significant component. The simplicity of this story blends in perfectly with the sheer delicacy of Hiraide's language which flows softly, in a whisper; a gentle wave trying to reach somebody's shores and engulf them with meaningful contemplation.
What's interesting about animals, my wife explained, is that even though a cat may be a cat, in the end, each individual has its own character.
“For me, Chibi is a friend with whom I share an understanding, and who just happens to have taken on the form of a cat.”



Never such a poignantly lyrical prose sounded so familiar.
Funny, these aversions we have for certain things. It does make you wonder a bit whether it's some kind of karmic connection with a past-life experience, even if that's just a bit too weird.
Nonetheless, Hiraide's writing wasn't enough. This novella tells a lovely story but didn't resonate with me as much as I would have hoped. Highly evocative, this writer's words become palpable objects and serene sceneries, but amid copious descriptions of any architectural piece one may imagine and abundant lines – ranging from the ethereal to the mundane – regarding the couple's relationship with the cat and their surroundings, something was missing. I remember turning the last page and looking through the window, as if I could find out there, in the vast city, in the overcast skies, whatever it is that I couldn't find in this book.



Oct 09, 16
* Also on my blog.
** Photo credit: Ikebana via conyeucuaban.com
Cat and flowers via Pinterestanimal-kingdom japanese132 s Jola184 363

A spring breeze at dawn -
Takashi Hiraide's words
dewdrops on cat's whiskers.

***
I still can recall the expression on my studentsÂ’ faces when I explained the rules of writing haiku poems to them. It was a mixture of bewilderment and incredulity. They seemed to be asking: you must be joking, itÂ’s sure not enough to be called a poem?! I think the kidsÂ’ reaction is similar to many adultsÂ’. Especially nowadays, when we live so fast that immortalizing moments and stopping for a while just to admire cherry blossoms or to gaze at a hairy caterpillar, seem pretty eccentric activities.

I guess some readers of ‘The Guest Cat' might feel my students because this book is similar to haiku. Its structure is different of course, as it is a short novel, actually something in between a novel an an essay, but Takashi Hiraide ponders on moments too. The narrator declares: ’I want to somehow grasp every detail of the events of that day, that one day a tiny dewdrop . . . but now it’s all engulfed in the profound darkness of time.' all haiku poets, Hiraide saves moments from oblivion. As Lucien Stryk states in the introduction to 'On Love and Barley: Haiku of Basho' : ‘The effect is one of spareness, yet the reader is aware of a microcosm related to transcendent unity. A moment, crystallized, distilled, snatched from time’s flow, and that is enough.’

‘The Guest Cat', full of such 'crystallized, distilled, snatched from time’s flow' moments, is a story about a childless Japanese couple in their mid-thirties who get acquainted with their neighbours’ cat, Chibi. To make things even more interesting, neither the narrator nor his wife particularly s cats at the beginning. You probably have already figured out what happens next. As time flies, we witness the growth of their friendship with Chibi. Well, the word friendship is not the perfect choice here: as you can guess, bit by bit the cat wraps the couple around her velveteen paw. No wonder! Christopher Hitchens observes: ‘Owners of dogs will have noticed that, if you provide them with food and water and shelter and affection, they will think you are god. Whereas owners of cats are compelled to realize that, if you provide them with food and water and shelter and affection, they draw the conclusion that they are gods.’ Chibi proves that Hitchens is right.

‘The Guest Cat' shimmers with a delicate sense of humour but there are heart-breaking moments as well, full of anger and grief. The story of the cat interweaves with musings on other topics, for example literature, art, Niccolo Machiavelli, philosophy. I found the digressions interesting but I didn’t enjoy them as much as the passages on Chibi.

Takashi Hiraide's subtlety reminds me of stroking luscious, cool silk. He writes with elegance and lightness, which according to Basho, the haiku master from the 17th century, is one of the most important elements of poetry. He called it ‘karumi’. In Basho's opinion a good poem should ‘seem light as a shallow river flowing over its sandy bed.’ This is exactly the impression I had while reading ‘The Guest Cat’. It felt as if Hiraide didn't use a keyboard to write his novel but a delicate, soft brush.

By the way, Basho wrote haiku poems about cats, for instance:
Â’Now catÂ’s done
mewing, bedroomÂ’s
touched by moonlight.'


Takashi Hiraide seems to have the sensitivity of a perceptive artist. ‘The Guest Cat’ reminded me of Japanese and Chinese paintings, which I adore. Chibi turned out to be a superb model. The images of her ‘clothed in moonlight’, rolling in the plum blossoms, sleeping on the sofa ‘ a talisman curled gently in the shape of a comma and dug up from a prehistoric archaeological site’, still stay with me. For the narrator and his wife observing Chibi is not only a sheer pleasure, it turns out to be thought-provoking also. The cat teaches them to appreciate and understand the things they paid no attention to before.

I think ‘The Guest Cat’ will be especially enjoyed by the readers who used to have a pet or are pet owners. The narrator’s wife confesses: ’For me, Chibi is a friend with whom I share an understanding, and who just happens to have taken on the form of a cat.' If you can relate to that, chances are you will the novel by Takashi Hiraide as much as I did.


'Young Cat Sleeping Under Flowering Saxifrage' by Maruyama ?kyo (1733-1795).113 s Carolyn2,398 669

This is a beautiful little book. Typically Japanese with lovely lyrical descriptions. Not much happens in the book but it is very evocative and I felt a sense of loss when it was finished.

A young Japanese couple who work from home live in a tiny cottage on the edge of a larger estate in a quiet part of Tokyo. The estate has a beautiful old traditional Japanese garden which they are allowed to use by the old couple living in the big house. One day a stray cat is adopted by their neighbours who named her Chibi, meaning 'little one'.

"Chibi was a jewel of a cat. Her pure white fur was mottled with several lampblack blotches containing just a bit of light brown. The sort of cat you see just about anywhere in Japan, except she was especially slim and tiny."

The young couple become enamoured by this tiny, graceful cat and try to entice her into their house. She quickly becomes a regular visitor and soon has them under her spell with her dainty ways and playful nature.

The couple know their tenure in the cottage will come to an end in a few months as the old couple in the big house are becoming frail and the estate will be put on the market to be bulldozed and turned into flats. In the meantime they enjoy using the garden, especially when Chibi is around to play and enjoy it with them. A very charming and touching story of how a little cat brought meaning to the lives of a young couple. 4.5?animal-stories around-the-world literary94 s1 comment Cecily1,195 4,589

“Observation is at its core an expression of love which doesn’t get caught up in sentiment.”

From first pageÂ’s delicate description of an optical illusion seen on a frosted window pane, this novella painstakingly documents minute and admiring observations, one object at a time. Nature features strongly: the cat, trees, butterflies, insects, but also windows and boundaries. The focus is on poetic beauty in the moment ( haiku), without shadow of sentiment, even when there is good cause for strong emotion.

I’m not a fan of sentimentality, but the narrator’s precise and clinical prose gave the impression of detachment, even when the words themselves suggested otherwise. I think that is why I was not as emotionally engaged as I wanted to be: I was looking at the patterns of his story as shadows through a knothole onto a frosted window pane, “ a dim movie screen”.

Loving the Unattainable

Cats tend to own people, rather than the other way round.

The main love object is Chibi: un- or not-quite-attainable because sheÂ’s a cat, exacerbated by her living with neighbours the other side of the alley. The narrator and his wife are her secondary humans.

All the other attachments (apart from the narrator to his wife) have a degree of unattainability as well. There is a hole at the heart, in the heart, of this little book, and maybe in me as well.

“By moving away, we also would be joining sides with those who forget.”
But maybe thatÂ’s for the best - especially if your love is without sentiment, or is unattainable.

Why Not More Stars?

There is beautiful imagery, and there are recurring themes (the guest cat, and the narrator living in the guesthouse of a larger estate; boundaries; windows; a zelkova tree; insects, and lightning), and Chibi is virtually mute.

I felt there was significance over the horizon, just beyond my awareness and understanding, grasp though I did for it.

The final chapter was unexpected and a little odd: disregard or reconsider the timeline and circumstances of ChibiÂ’s death, half a book ago. Huh?

It’s also worth mentioning that there is not as much about Chibi as hardcore felinophiles might want. And for some strange reason, we’re told that the narrator’s wife “felt very close to animals” - except that she “viscerally disd”... ducks!

On the other hand, I love the picture on the cover, and the small format and thick paper of my copy felt delightfully suitable.

Quotes

• “Its branches... spread unhindered [and] extended their luxuriant fingers… providing all with the blessing of its leafy protection.”

• “The cat’s manner of rejection was cold, white light.”

• Chibi sleeping “ a talisman curled gently in the shape of a comma and dug up from a prehistoric archaeological site - a deep sense of happiness arrived, as if the house itself had dreamed this scene.”

• Chibi entered their lives “as if a silken opening in a fabric had been continuously moistened and stretched… But at the same time… something else was closing in and pressing itself against that tendency.” Fate.

• “Everything timed to the rhythm of illumination and concealment” - in a chapter almost entirely devoted to windows.

• “The full moon shone through the glass eaves above us with their slits a bamboo screen, so that the image was drawn out, flowing there a milky white river.”

• A dragonfly “took flight then and approached the stream of [hose] water in midair, kissing it a precision machine.”

• “It seemed as if the boundary between the two households had itself come into question.”

• “How much we see through colored glasses” - but we only realise when it’s too late. (This is about everything looking “dreary and drab” after loss.)

• “The word ‘to grieve’ or ‘lament’ in Japanese is actually made up of two different kanji characters - ‘sadness’ and ‘resentment’.china-japan-asia74 s Rebecca3,834 3,163

(2.5) Sigh. Such a disappointment. As a cat-loving freelance writer who aspires to read more literature in translation, I thought from the blurb that this book could not be more perfect for me. I bought it in a charity shop one afternoon and started reading right away. ItÂ’s only 140 pages, so I finished within 24 hours, but felt at a distance from the story the whole time.

Part of it might be the translation – the translator’s notes at the end explain some useful context about the late 1980s setting, but also conflate the narrator and the author in such a way that the book seems an artless memoir rather than a novella.

But the more basic problem for me is that thereÂ’s simply not enough about the cat. ThereÂ’s plenty of architectural detail about the guesthouse the narrator and his wife rent on the grounds of a mansion, plenty of economic detail about the housing marketÂ…but the cat just doesnÂ’t make enough of an impression.

IÂ’m at a bit of a loss to explain why this has been such a bestseller.

(See also my blog post on Five Books about Cats.)cats lit-in-translation66 s Holly Bik174 3

I really really wanted to this book, but I found it entirely forgettable. I think this might be an example of something being "lost in translation", since much of the profound nature of Asian literature seems to get wiped away in English versions. The prose was poetic and lyrical nonetheless, and I got a very vivid picture of the lives of the couple and their interactions with the cat. But as the plot developed I lost the connection to the philosophical and metaphorical, and at the end of the book I wasn't really sure what the point was, or what I was supposed to take away. Maybe I read this book to fast and need to read it again, or maybe I need to take a Japanese literature class to understand the deeper layers of the book.bestseller-lists65 s Celeste Corrêa 331 206

Leio pouca Literatura Japonesa talvez pela estranheza dos costumes sociais num mundo cada vez mais globalizado. Sinto sempre um mal-estar como aconteceu com o penúltimo, «A Polícia da Memória».
Neste «O Gato Que Nos Visitou» procurava eu uma semelhança com um cão que nos visitava e pertencia a uns amigos vizinhos e tudo acabou num grande desgosto. Se encontrei o que pretendia? Talvez.
Um casal a meio dos seus trinta anos e não ansiando por ter filhos começa a ser visitado por um gato, que, na verdade era uma gata, chamada Chibi, pêlo branco com manchas de tom castanho-acinzentado.
A gata apareceu na vida deste casal em 1988 entre o fim do Outono e o início do Inverno e gradualmente começou a entrar dentro de casa através de uma fenda de uma janela ligeiramente aberta.
Outros gatos aparecem mas não é um livro sobre felinos; é sobre o destino, o fluxo do destino, as casas que ocupamos, o que é ou não verdadeiramente nosso.
Maquiavel afirmava que mais da metade da nossa vida é regida pelo destino, enquanto a restante fica ao critério da força que lhe resiste; ainda segundo o autor de «O Príncipe», o destino é um rio que pode transbordar a qualquer momento provocando fracassos e destruições. É possível alterar o percurso de um rio?
Escreve o autor deste livro que nem Maquivel com a sua sagacidade e Leonardo da Vince com a sua genialidade foram capazes de desviar as águas do rio Arno.
É um livro com várias camadas que necessitarei de reler na certeza que sempre irei encontrar gotículas que se encontram escondidas na escuridão da memória.

O que fazer quando temos um desgosto? Como mitigar a tristeza? Permanecer ou arrumar a vida em caixas de cartão e mudar?takashi-hiraide46 s14 comments Jim CoughenourAuthor 4 books198

"It's best to go empty-handedÂ…"

An almost perfect little book, as delicate as a netsuke. Its tale is simple – a young bohemian couple is adopted by a neighbor's cat, who is treated as a guest, not a pet.Chibi was a jewel of a cat. Her pure white fur was mottled with several lampblack blotches containing just bit of light brown. The sort of cat you might see just about anywhere in Japan, except she was especially slim and tiny.I didn't realize until I'd almost finished the book that "Chibi" appears throughout, but that humans – including the young writer and his poet wife – are never named. There is a friend, referred to as "Y." Otherwise (so far as I recall) everyone is anonymous: the old woman; the neighbor; my wife. A few names appear toward the end, but these are all cats.

I that.

The prose is crafted, elegant without being showy. In part this is due to the skill of its translator Eric Selland, but it must be the essence of the book itself. Takashi Hiraide is best known as a poet, and The Guest Cat reads a poet's journal. I can't think of a better way to praise it.cat-people japanese-literature44 s Jean517 38

OK, I admit it. I love cats and I was snookered into this one mainly by the cover and the review wasn't bad at all. It's kind of buying wine by the label...if it's cute, I buy it! Boy, can you get stuck! In this case, once again, I got stuck. I just didn't get it! It was NOT at all what I was hoping for. Didn't the writing, didn't the setting (very confusing descriptions), the characters were less than interesting and the cat was not appealing at all! That's saying a lot from a cat lover! I don't recommend it, even for die hard cat lovers...40 s Aditi920 1,436

“Cats are connoisseurs of comfort.”

----James Herriot


Takashi Hiraide, a Japanese writer, has penned a soul touching and thoroughly captivating tale about a cat and a couple's relationship in his book, The Guest Cat that is centered around a mid aged couple who are freelance writers and work from their rented cottage and lead a very quite and uneventful life, but one day their life brings purpose as an uninvited as well as the neighbor's cat lands up to their kitchen and starts visiting their household religiously everyday and gradually brings joy and happiness to their quiet life. Although happiness is long lived in this couple's life, as a tragic event shakes them to their very core.


Synopsis:

A couple in their thirties live in a small rented cottage in a quiet part of Tokyo. They work at home as freelance writers. They no longer have very much to say to one another.
One day a cat invites itself into their small kitchen. She is a beautiful creature. She leaves, but the next day comes again, and then again and again. New, small joys accompany the cat; the days have more light and colour. Life suddenly seems to have more promise for the husband and wife; they go walking together, talk and share stories of the cat and its little ways, play in the nearby Garden. But then something happens that will change everything again.
The Guest Cat is an exceptionally moving and beautiful novel about the nature of life and the way it feels to live it.



A middle aged couple who works as freelance writer has been living in a small rented house attached to a palatial cottage owned by an old age couple and that cottage has huge gardens filled with lush trees and flowers. This mid-aged couple's life is not that eventful and most of the time they pass their days without much talking among one another. But then one fine day, their lives are filled with a purpose when a guest cat, the cat of their neighbor's, visits their household and start visiting them day after day, fixing her daily routine among the couple's life. Gradually the man and the wife start discussing about the cat's habits and cute little activities of the cat among one another as their lives are fulfilled with greater joy that the cat manged to bring within no time, but this happiness is short lived with the changing politics and the rising economy, as the land prices began to soar up, the owners of the palatial cottage decide to sell the whole property with an ultimatum given to that mid-aged couple, but for them it is not easy to part with that female guest cat, and as another shocking tragic event strikes up in their lives, which completely destroys every ounce of happiness that they felt for all those times when they were surrounded by that cat.

A warm meow to all my fellow cat lovers. Here's the book that you've been yearning to read for ages now, grab a copy now and lose yourselves in the cuteness of the cat named Chibi (meaning, little one) who will fill up your hearts with happiness and will bring a clam feeling just by reading about her daily activities. Chibi is no ordinary cat, she can instantly make you folks crazy for her charm, her cleverness and her naughtiness. She is a package of fur(n) ball that you would desire to cuddle up with whole day. So without wasting a second, simply get your hands on this book NOW.

The writing style of the author is extremely evocative and thoughtfully layered with hear felt emotions that will make the readers contemplate with the story's emotional side strikingly. The narrative is articulate, pleasing and is laced with perfect emotions that sync well with the story's mood. The dialogues are enriched with the heavy Japanese flair even though the story has been translated into English. There are quite a few underlying stories that support the main story line, still the pacing is quite fast as the readers will find themselves being swayed from the then Japanese political and socio-economical changes and the season changes to the cat's daily habits amidst the low hum drum of the couple's life.

The backdrop of the story line, that is portrayed through the subtle color of the landscapes of rural Japan, is vividly captured and depicted through a lyrical prose that will not only make the readers feel the atmosphere and the seasons in the air but will also make them able to visually imagine each and every scenes unfolding right before their eyes. The landscapes of this rural town just a few miles away from the big city, Tokyo is strikingly painted through its streets, the flora as well as the fauna, the weather, the people, the livelihood of those folks, the architecture of the houses, the financial conditions and the local staple food. The author manages to bring alive this town through the narration of the protagonist and amidst the tales of this cute little naughty cat.

The characters are extremely well drawn and developed through few layers, especially the character of the wife is arrested through quite a few layers and the readers will project her as a humble, down-to-earth yet complex lady, whose many layers are unraveled through her straight forward yet thoughtful demeanor. The main protagonist, the writer, is a strong character whose resolute voice reads a soothing balm on the readers' hearts. The cat too has a personality of its own, how the cat is clever enough to keep the humans especially the couple eager to make them hear the sound of her voice, how she never lets the couple touch her or pet her, how she is clever enough to know the exclusive entry made for her to the couple's house and how she plays with the ping pong ball is enough to fill the readers' hearts with glowing happiness from inside out. even the supporting characters the old lady, the friend of the author, the neighbors are also well crafted out from scratch who are not only real but are also very interesting.

In a nutshell, this is a must read story not only for cat lovers but also for those who enjoy a well developed literary tale with a Japanese flavor.

Verdict: Chibi, the cat, simply steals the show, which is a fur ball wrapped in intense cuteness.

Courtesy: Thanks to the BiblioBox for picking out this book for their October theme.

animals family friends ...more33 s Emma Sea2,203 1,140

for cross-cultural reasons this was a challenging read; I still struggle with the ending, particularly.

The sentence structure and carefully pruned language are sublime and I simply loved the experience of reading the story. Seeing the settings come alive was watching someone paint in front of me. However I was always aware I was only seeing the surface of the story, missing everything underneath. The translator's notes at the back helped a great deal, and I need to re-read now.

Highly recommended. auckland-library32 s emily269 2,386

japanese books with cats as a central element of the story gotta be one of my favorite genres 2022 japan-lit32 s Henk934

A sweet set of observations on the transience of existence and the way cats own people rather than the other way around. I lacked a clear impulse or conclusion to the book
By moving away, we also would be joining sides with those who forget

A fast read, meditative in nature, on a couple living in a changing Japan at the end of the 1980s. The emperor is dying, large homeowners are dying out as well, and the idylle the couple has translating works in the garden of a large estate is drawing to a close. A cat offers some playfulness and warmth in another wise quite sterile book. Even the wife of the narrator doesnÂ’t come into focus much.

Nature is much more the main character of the book in a way, with beautiful reflections on dragonflies, mantis, cicadas and trees. Baseball and the deflation of the Japanese economy in the early 1990s form part of the tale, but the attachment to the cat, besides a rather random Machiavelli chapter, form the main focus of the book.

Everything changes, but the need for connection with nature remains constant in this book.japanese-literature29 s Milica100 29

Upozorenje broj 1: Ne uzimajte ovu knjigu u ruke ako ne volite ma?ke.
Upozorenje broj 2: ?itanje zapo?injete na sopstvenu odgovornost ako previše volite ma?ke i osetljivi ste na njih i njihove tužne sudbine.
Ja spadam u ovu drugu kategoriju i nekoliko puta sam bila na ivici suza, jer mi se sli?na situacija dogodila pre nekoliko godina.
Naime, roman je napisan u 1. licu i pri?a prati mladi bra?ni par u ?iju se ku?u useljava komšijska ma?ka ?ibi. Nikada nisu ostvarili kontakt sa njom, uvek ostaje neka vrsta misterioznog bi?a sa drugog sveta, ali im se lagano uvla?i pod kožu i život bez nje postaje izlišan. Svideli su mi se elementi misterioznog i magijskog, koji se vezuju za lik ma?ke.
Roman se da pro?itati za jedno posle podne i svakako mu treba dati šansu. 29 s Ailsa184 259

Appreciate the ephemeral, that is, everything in your life.
29 s Jean1,755 765

This story takes place in Japan in the 1980s. The couple, one a freelance writer the other a proof-reader and editor, work from home. Over time communication decreases between them as they are involved in their solitary work. One day a neighborÂ’s cat wanders into their home. Chibi begins to make regular visits to them. The cat brings them small pleasures that allow them to reconnect with each other.

The book is extremely well written. It is short only three and a half hours long (140 pages). The style of the writing and the story is Japanese. The translation of the book from Japanese to English appears to be excellent. Unless the reader has had exposures to Japanese writing, it might be difficult to totally enjoy the subtle parts of the story. Characteristic of Japanese writing the philosophical passages and literary reference are quite simple and sparse. The descriptions are beautiful and even lyrical; the vivid prose keeps everything flowing. The prose is focused on the people and places not the events. The cat, Chibi, is the center of the narrative. Typical of a Japanese story the simplicity belies a depth that is executed in a subtle way. I thoroughly enjoyed this gentle, thoughtful and subtly profound work. The author, Takashi Hiraide, is a Japanese poet.

I read this as an audiobook downloaded from Audible. David Smith does a good job narrating the story. Smith is a voice over artist and audiobook narrator.

animal-stories audio-book fiction25 s Chantal1,027 164

No clue why this author called this book "The guest cast" because he writes more about his guest house, the surroundings and the lifestyle. Also the book said it would go about his relationship with his wife what was on rocky roads, I have to say there was little to no mention. The characters weren't built either. So I have to conclude this was a boring read and not what it would be according to the flap.

125-225 book-cabinet-read23 s Knjigoholi?arka155 8 Read

On me ?eka, on me verno ?eka, na vratima jedna njuuuška meka...

Ok, ovaj uvodni ki? preuzet je iz "Sre?nih ljudi", serije koja se, GLE ?UDA, premijerno reprizira na javnom servisu po šurnajsti put. Elem, moram da priznam da mi upravo taj uvodni ki? daje dobar šlagvort za kratak osvrt na "Goš?u", roman?i? koji je prethodnih dana pazarilo bar 79256278934256 mojih GR i IG kontakata, prvenstveno zahvaljuju?i preslatkoj ma?ki na koricama, I guess.

Da nastavimo: Život te?e, a vreme nas gazi...peva Aljoša Vu?kovi? u Sre?nim ljudima, dok mu brk podrhtava od muke u nadi da je honorar za snimljene epizode makar dobar, a Hiradeov roman jeste upravo to - ne pri?a o jednoj slatkoj ma?ki, nego pri?a o onim prelomnim trenucima u životu, kada se nešto bespovratno promeni, i nikada ništa više ne bude isto kao pre. Sigurno smo svi, na ovaj ili onaj na?in, imali neke takve trenutke u životu. Kada se selimo u drugi grad, kada prelazimo na drugo radno mesto, kada gubimo nekoga koga volimo, ili kada, naprosto, globalna situacija melje živote svih nas na nekom širem planu i mi možemo samo da ?utke posmatramo kako jedna po jedna, stvari koje su nam bile prijatna navika - jer upravo to je o?it znak svake promene - prekid navika u koje smo svi ušuškani - nestaju.

I guramo tako, dan za danom, stvari oko nas se menjaju, malo po malo, i što bi Calvin i Hobbes zaklju?ili, svaki dan je isti, a odjednom shvatiš da je sve druga?ije. I onda, suo?eni sa promenom, lamentiramo nad malim stvarima koje su ?inile taj život navika, malim stvarima koje oblikuju svakodnevnicu koja nestaje. A u životu bra?nog para iz knjige, ma?ka ?ibi je upravo najsnažniji simbol jednog kratkog perioda u kom su se usudili da neke stvari u svom životu prihvate kao takve, da oko njih oblikuju svoj život, da se usude da budu sre?ni i da im bude u tim izabranim navikama ugodno.

Sa ?ibi, nije otišlo samo jedno malo stvorenje "poput bisera", ve? i ?itav jedan dom koji su zajedno sagradili, sa odlaskom ?ibi, došla je PROMENA.

E, sad, životariš tako celog veeekaaa, a kod ku?e niko te ne ?ekaaa (ajde Aljoša mrš iz moje glave), disparitet izme?u japanskog i balkanskog mentaliteta je više nego o?it, i tu leži najve?a kvaka ove knjige. Spomenuh negde lamentiranje - o, Bogo moj - lamentiranje je blaga re?. Generalno gledano, melanholija nije moja šolja sakea, a žal za mlados' mi leži samo kad Bora Stankovi? opisuje kako gazda Mitke sebi razbija flaše rakije o glavu, pa bih se suzdržala od komentara na ponašanje pojedinih likova ove knjige, da me ne bi neko optužio kako sam drvose?a bez tananog ose?aja za suptilno obožavanje pupoljaka šljivinog cveta.

Summa summarum: delikatno i zanimljivo, ali lako zaboravljivo štivo. Aj u Teslu da ?u za 10 dana zaboraviti o ?emu se radi.201724 s Ken358 2

There's no way to be sure just how much the translator is responsible for my not liking this book, but he may be a large part of the reason I finally took the book back to the library about two-thirds of the way through it. The early promise of simple elegance never gets beyond precious word choice, soggy subtlety, and vapid characters. I was aching for light and color, for a heartbeat that never came.24 s Steven R. Kraaijeveld519 1,860

What a beautiful, sad, beautiful novel.books-i-own cats contemporary ...more24 s ? Sandi ? 1,423 40

5 stars

Japanese literature is very much different from English literature. The Japanese seem to write a whole book about a subject without ever directly speaking of it. Their fiction appears to take on an average everyday story, while in fact relating something much different. And amazingly it is easy for different people to read totally different underlying topics within the very same stories.

For me The Guest Cat was all about death. Not only does Chibi, the wandering cat, die in the story, but so many other things move towards death also. The main couple of the story are suffering through what could have been a dying marriage. The garden between the houses ends up withering and dying. The elderly couple, the landlords, pass on. The copulation of the skimmer, signaling the delicate balance between life and death. The fence begins to decay and falls down. The loss of being able to mourn at Chibi's grave site. The neighbors move away from the house next door. The guest house is vacated. And finally after moving, and then walking back, the couple sees that both the houses are gone and there lays a fallow field. Everything gone, as though it did not exist, dead.

Although I have not read a lot, I very much enjoy Japanese literature. I especially the short stories, this one, that stay with one or two main themes embedded in an average everyday story. A longer book is usually much heavier and sometimes has several themes making it harder to find and translate. I think the translator did a very good job of translating this book from Japanese to English and still maintaining the nuance of the story. I found this story to be very enjoyable - however should I read it again I am sure I would be directed towards another theme that undoubtedly runs through it.

So goes the wonders of Japanese literature.This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.Show full review300-350-pages-minus-plus animals another-ctry-book-or-author ...more22 s Sophie Crane4,437 165

As a cat lover and with good I was interested to read this book. It was not quite as I expected because there was not a lot of story in it but a gentle tale of how a little cat entered the hearts of a Japanese couple who seemed to have a pretty sterile life. It chose to spend what seemed half its life with them and when it died they realised how much it had inhabited their lives and being. It is all so typical of how these independent little creatures become so lovable and part of a family but it is true that they are the ones who chose where they want to spend their time.animals24 s liv ?329 260

"What's interesting about animals, my wife explained, is that even though a cat may be a cat, in the end, each individual has its own character."

The Guest Cat follows two writers who work from home as freelance editors as their neighbor's cat invites herself into their home. We watch as the cat, Chibi, begins to worm her way into their lives and hearts of this young couple. Takashi Hiraide really does something incredible in making the mundane enchanting. Chibi truly is such a prominent character in this book as we see her perfectly cat interactions with everything throughout the days and weeks and months.

"I wonder where it all comes from - this need to go to the place where the body has been laid to rest. It's the need to reconfirm how precious someone was and how replaceable, and the desire to reconnect with them on a different plane.

The backdrop of this story is 1989/90 Tokyo, where the cost of living is exponentially increasing and, due to unforeseen circumstances, our main couple has to move out of their rental. We watch as they try their best to find somewhere near this cat that isn't theirs to take, but prices have raised so much that it's impossible to live much of anywhere - let alone nearby. We watch as two stories, one of a cat and her neighbors and the other of the natural areas of the world come to a close as houses are torn down to make room for expensive condominiums.

This is a simple yet poignant book about what it means to love and to lose. It is bittersweet and beautiful.bipoc cats japan ...more22 s9 comments Samantha Roberts3

I am completely rubbish at but I could not put this little book down! I became so absorbed in the Japanese couple's life and how they adored the cat. The way the book is written is poetic and very descriptive, so much so that you can paint a vivid image in your mind of how their home looks, how the garden looks and so on. I genuinely just really enjoyed myself reading this delightful book.22 s Paulo - Listening "Forth" by Proto-Kaw110 12 Read

This is not a story about a cat!

The cat: symbol of supreme grace, intelligence, and independence. A fascinating creature long revered and hated throughout our History.
They are not "owned"; they allow us to serve their needs, more or less gracefully and more or less demanding. Always alert, even when sleeping they brush our lives softly with their elegance and supreme disdain. At the same time, they are also fiercely independent, always choosing to live on their own terms.
Cats are symbolic of rebirth and resurrection (nine lives, remember?).
Because they are at ease at night as in the day, they are also associated with darkness, and darkness often goes with fear, the unconscious, and things that are hidden, ambushed "waiting for us" to "pounce". The author plays with this symbolism, presenting a superficial uninteresting life that hides layers upon layers of obscure frustrations, desires and lost opportunities, staring in a dark room and never quite making things out.. It is a little sad, very sad book.

Despite our fierce beliefs we, most of all, live unremarkable little lives where we constantly feel that something is missing.
You're working hard, fighting your inner demons, the silences between couples, the passage of time, trying to get ahead and bring some meaning to life, doing everything you can to make it a little better, and always trying to keep everything balanced. You make time to exercise, eat more healthily, meditate, and maybe spend time with friends and family while writing on Goodreads.
You have everything planned and believe that life is almost perfect! And so it should be, except for that tiny little thing that keeps tugging at the heart and mind. You don't really know what it is, but it's there and it's driving you a little crazy.
You often say to yourself that it is fatigue that brings on depression or the unhappiness of finding yourself stuck in an unwanted routine. As a solution, people try to get out, in mindless orgies of acquiring useless objects or experiencing extreme sensations, pure mindless luxuries air travel thousands of miles, for no other reason than pointless recreation, in the hope that these activities will resolve the strange and inexplicable void felt inside.
But once back to the real world, empty hand and heart, the problem is still there, and the technology that simultaneously connects and isolates all of us doesn't help a bit, and our loneliness leads to increased inner emptiness.
Sounds familiar?
So, what is this mysterious thing that is pulling at you, leaving you feeling empty and unfulfilled in a life that would, from the outside, seem all but peaceful and fulfilled? ItÂ’s the wrong pursuit of "Happiness".
We are constantly presented with things that we believe will make us happier. New cars, flashier televisions, prettier women or men (or cats), houses, furniture, more money, exotic vacations, and a myriad of things that go along with that stuff.
We are pounded by books, television ads, blogs, and billboards about how we can get everything we want in life, and live longer, younger, better, wealthier, and most of all, as subliminal insinuation, "Happier".
The simple truth is, we are so focused on getting what we want that we forget about everyone else in the world around us. And therein lies the empty feeling inside. Right now, some people are hungry and have no right or means to eat. And I'm not talking about Africa or India; they most ly are a square mile of you, kids who donÂ’t have a decent place to sleep or a simple aspirin to soothe the persistent pain of untreated disease, aspirins that we have "by the pound" in our bathroom pharmacy that will end in the trash bin shortly after the expiration date.
The "Guest Cat" cannot be read as a book with a captivating story about a cat with a fairytale ending. It is an intelligent expounding about emptiness in life and the trials and labours we face at different stages to fill that void inside.
To live as true human beings, on a higher level than animals, we must fill our emptiness, our disinterest in the only world we have and the other human beings that didn't have the same chances we had.
When we live and occupy a planet, stupid biblical plague insects, but endowed with intelligent technical ability, what do we do? we slowly destroy all life on the said planet. It is so deeply rooted in us that, "it's us against the rest of the world and I must keep up to get what I want", that we, as sentient animals, have little chance of survival if we continue as we do now. These things are known to some scientists, to those selected people who still have some fundamental intelligent interest in our destiny and future as a species.

The Guest Cat is a parable that symbolises lost opportunities and the frustrated attempt to recover what was lost. Whether you are a cat lover or not, don't be swayed by any preconceived opinions. The deceptively simple plot leads you to a world of art, philosophy and the mysterious nature of our bonds with other living beings. Ultimately, it's about what it means to love and lose. Even dog lovers will relate.
The best books are usually the ones that provoke reflections that incite us to change something within us. They speak to that emptiness inside, sometimes quietly, sometimes loudly and slowly filling it. When well written, they bring up front important questions and force us to look inward. In time, small miracles, they stay with us, sometimes as a counselling angel, sometimes as an inciting demon.

In the end, you will want to read The Guest Cat more than once, so you can notice more details, and understand deeper meanings, something you canÂ’t do with life.21 s2 comments spillingthematcha683 925

3.5/5
Urocza historia, ale nie wzbudzi?a we mnie emocji. 21 s Emily B467 483

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