Month: November 2023

Vol. 3

by Atsushi Okada

Still not the greatest, but it has me laughing, and shaking my head at the improbable poses the cats take when leaping around in fights or dancing. So in this volume, the three strangers to our cat gang’s territory continue to beat up individuals, especially the Bengal who is a fierce fighter. We learn (alongside a surprised Ryuusei) that the gang actually has four females- he just never met the other three because they’re in another area, raising kittens. Telling the young ones scary stories about the sphinx to threaten them into good behavior. Taiga fights the Bengal in a field, where there’s a little side bit about an old man who sits nearby and observes the feral cats- has been doing so for decades. Ryuusei and many of the others succumb to the big fluffy dude’s catnip fumes (they call him Smokey). The young exotic housecat Mocchi is the only one unaffected. So even though timid and unnerved, he takes on Smokey, using his smarts instead of muscle to win. Raiga has another confrontation- with his brother, who shows up and immediately they pitch into an argument. Now there’s more backstory about why the younger brother was once outed from the gang. Has he returned to cause more trouble . . .  or to help?

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 2/5
160 pages, 2018

Vol. 2

by Atsushi Okada

My kid looked at the cover of one of these and said “that looks bad.” As in, awful. Yeah, kinda. I wouldn’t say I’m really enjoying them, and I skim over a lot of the fight scenes, but it started to grow on me a bit in this second volume.

There’s not quite as much fighting, for one, and some slightly more interesting plot points are introduced. Ryuusei finds out that the huge calico cat boss of the rival gang is actually a female– and he’s not the only one who’s shocked. There’s some backstory provided on her. He doesn’t want to but Ryuusei fights her in front of everybody else, and beats her, which earns him the respect of the rivals, so now the two gangs have a kind of truce. Then we get backstory on the calico that Ryuusei is actually looking for. The cat gang has a party (I’m guessing catnip is involved) where they all dance in freakishly odd poses (standing up like people, but in their cat form, with limbs doing things that aren’t physically possible) and they all collapse on the pavement afterwards. They encounter a young exotic shorthair tom, a lost housecat who is bewildered by all the aggression and scorn towards him (yeah, the stray cats despise housecats in this series too). Then run into a trio of strangers -separately- encroaching on their turf- a spotted male Bengal who trounces everyone without much effort. A creepy looking sphinx (depicted in human form as a lean bald dude covered in tattoos) that I thought was very well-depicted artistically- and he just stares at the other cats, who are so freaked out by his sinister appearance they don’t dare fight him. And a big fluffy male wafting fumes of catnip that makes everyone fall aside in a daze. Are these three working together? or is something else going on . . .

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 2/5
160 pages, 2017

Vol. 1

by Atsushi Okada

Meh. Somewhat funny, some cringe-worthy, just okay. Why did I read the whole thing? Not sure. It goes pretty quick in one sitting, because most pages are fight scenes, which bore me.

Tale of stray cats in a city, that are depicted as street gangs. When there’s no people around, they’re shown as humans. Kind of odd. You can easily tell which person is supposed to be which cat, though. I did appreciate that this seems to be showing how rough and unpleasant a stray cat’s life actually is- they’re mostly facing off with other males to defend territory and control who has access to females and food. In this story, the main cat gang has one female “molly” they protect, run by an orange tabby guy called Taiga. A young tough (brown tabby) named Ryuusei shows up, looking for a scarred male calico. Ends up fighting the gang leader, chastised for not knowing the rules of the turf (he doesn’t want to have to follow any rules, that’s why living “free” on the streets). Impresses the female (though she won’t admit it) when he beats Taiga, but then he runs off, not wanting to take over the leadership role- which is the usual protocol. When a rival gang takes the female Mii captive, they all go together to confront them, but it’s pretty funny how the other cats ditch them along the way- a few get scared off by a dog, three stop to paw at a lizard, another trio are distracted by a shopkeeper offering scraps, etc. until only Ryuusei and Taiga are on the edge of the territory to face their enemies. Also funny how they’d be deeply involved in these tense faceoffs with rivals, when ordinary people will show up “awww, kitties, how cute!” to these battle-scarred toms that are engaged in matters of life and death- from their view. By the end of the book, the two main characters have joined forces, Ryuusei seems to have found who he was looking for (the rival gang’s new leader is a large scarred calico) and I was eyeing the rest of the stack wondering if I wanted to continue. Mild curiosity where the story’s going, even though I don’t care for all the fighting and gratuitous rear ends (of the male cats, and the female Mii when she’s in human form).

The artwork is kind of odd, totally agree with some of the other reviews you can find on that. Sometimes the cats have humanlike poses that look strange, or their legs are in awkward positions. But when they’re shown as humans, they often take wild leaps that no human could accomplish, hold their hands like claws, etc. I don’t know why the main cat Ryuusei has that very well-defined star marking on his chest. I did think it pretty funny that in one scene he’s supposed to be fighting some of the rival gang members, who found him stuck in a cardboard box he’d squished himself into, to take a nap. Spent half the fight getting knocked around because he couldn’t get out of the box.

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 2/5
176 pages, 2017

the Complete Manga Collection

by Gin Shirakawa

There’s thirteen chapters in this book, I’m assuming from the subtitle that it was originally published as a number of smaller volumes. It’s about the lives of stray cats in Tokyo. Particularly, one cat that used to live in a home, beloved by a human, until an accident occurred and he found himself suddenly on the streets, in shock. The alley cats shun him at first for being on the side of humans, but they convince him he was abandoned so he develops a sense of bitterness towards the people he used to love. In spite of that, he has a strange attachment to the ribbon collar on his neck, can’t let it go even though the other cats tease him for it, and try to talk him into getting rid of it. He goes with them to feeding stations, where people in the neighborhood take turns caring for the feral cats. Makes friends with one other young male cat (a faintly marked lynx point siamese- very striking cat) and gets involved with friction between all the others, when the older male who rules the colony shows signs of being ill. (The other ferals are appalled and feel betrayed when near the end of the story, they find out this older male has a young human who thinks fondly of him and gave him a name, which he’d kept secret). Meanwhile, alongside all of this is the story of people involved- a young woman who is taking her turn to feed the strays, even though she hates cats (or is terrified of them, it’s unclear at first). Her younger brother helps- he just adores cats of all kinds. Gradually through some flashbacks and instances of characters explaining their stories to each other, the reader learns why this woman feels so antagonistic towards cats, the tragedy that happened in her life, and how it is intricately linked to our main cat character Nanao. It seems possible the two might make a connection again, and together find a way to make their lives better.

So much in this story I just can’t get into or it might spoil it for someone- about friendship, survival and grief. It moves quickly and is hard to put down. The artwork is very good, the cats look convincing, even elegant and graceful sometimes. Shows a lot about the tough lives that strays lead, the efforts of certain people to help them, and how cruel others can be who don’t want ferals around (warning for a few brief scenes of cats being forcibly caught and threatened harmed by unscrupulous characters). There’s even a few pages in the back describing the work of groups that practice TNR (trap, neuter, release) to reduce populations of feral cats. And an odd little short which shows the main cat Nanao and his lynx point friend Machi, getting turned into humans by an older cat who casts a spell on them. It was awkward and funny and strange, the only instance in the book where magic was suggested.

I did think the very close connection Nanao had to his first owner seemed stronger than you’d expect for a cat- the part when he tried to run after a vehicle his owner was in, seemed a lot more like how a dog would behave. But all the other parts showing his affection for his one person, were just endearing, the behavior of the cats felt very real, even though they teased each other, joked, and said things in anger that of course real cats wouldn’t think of. Hints at the very end, that there will be future volumes- I sure hope so, because I’d like to read more of this!

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 4/5
452 pages, 2018

Vol. 4

by Konami Kanata

In this volume, Tai-Chan the kitten is always at Sue’s house, so I don’t know what happened with that part where he went back to his original owner? Shrug. On the very first pages, the kitten from last time shows up, and the two start playing wildly. Sue thinks this is her chance to rest, but she can’t completely escape their antics and noise. Only when the kittens collapse to sleep does she get some peace and quiet. It gets hot in the summer, and now the cats are looking for cool places to rest (they end up trying to open the freezer). Tai-Chan struggles when he first has to get his claws trimmed. He’s baffled by the sight of birds on the television that he can’t catch, and likewise objects through the window. He’s terrified by thunderstorms, though Sue tries to assure him it’s okay. The kitten practices sneaking and pouncing some more, and encourages Sue to play hide-and-seek with him, and tag. He goes outside and finds the other kitten again, they explore things. He goes into a neighbor’s house where Fuku Fuku lives (an older cat in this book), and tries to share her food. Back home, Tai-Chan is excited when the owner has sashimi for dinner, and Sue shows him how to effectively beg by looking super cute. Tai-Chan plays with a ribbon, and finds something curious inside a container- when he asks Sue what is is, she investigates and gets her head stuck! This book ends in a cliffhanger- the owner packs to leave for a weekend trip, makes preparations for the cats by setting out extra food and water, but then Sue and Tai-Chan go in the backyard and accidentally get locked outside. They’re stunned and don’t know what to do. I was a tad irked not being able to continue that storyline right away, as my library doesn’t have book 5 yet.

Pages at the back have another little extra, about how the author once trapped a stray injured cat (with help from a volunteer) in order to get it medical care.

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 3/5
128 pages, 2020

Vol. 3

by Konami Kanata

Reading through these right quick. Third book about Sue the older cat and Tai-Chan, young black kitten who came to stay in her household. Sue tries to teach Tai-Chan to navigate the stairs safely. Tai-Chan practices sneaking up and leaping out at other cats- namely Sue, but also a stray tabby that walks regularly through their yard. Sue tries to find places to nap where Tai-Chan won’t run over her in his playful antics. (The best was hiding behind the television). They both search for warm places when the weather is cold- but Sue can’t fit into a fuzzy slipper like Tai-Chan does! and they end up snuggling together. The kitten gets in the way during various cleaning operations performed by their owner again, rummages through Christmas decorations, and pulls toilet paper off the roll all over the house- getting Sue mixed up in things when she isn’t at all to blame. But most notably, Tai-Chan’s original owner comes back to claim him- so for a while the house is very quiet. Sue thinks this will be very welcome, having things back the way they used to be, but soon realizes she actually misses having the kitten around. However he hasn’t gone far and shows up at the window again looking for Sue, becomes quite the regular visitor. Also in the very last panel another kitten comes by the house, sneaks in and leaves again barely seen, sparking curiosity for what will happen next.

There’s a little extra comic in the final pages, where the author tells how not to get involved when cats fight- hers was having an altercation with a strange cat through the window, and when the owner approached, the cat turned and attacked owner. Little cautionary tale of misplaced aggression.

Borrowed from the public library. Next book in the series.

Rating: 3/5
128 pages, 2019

Vol. 2

by Konami Kanata

More Sue and Tai-Chan! Their owner brings home another new cat toy, which Sue watches intently, but Tai-Chan always pounces first. Some neighbor cats come strolling briefly through the yard, and Sue teaches Tai-Chan how to greet them from the window. Sue tries to teach Tai-Chan the proper way to respond when humans call his name (by at first ignoring them) but the kitten is too eager for everything. Tai-Chan tries to practice making fierce faces, but it’s just funny instead. He gets in the way when things are being cleaned. He tries to hide his “toys” (crumpled paper, bits of string, etc) but the owner eventually finds things when tidying up. The kitten experiences his first snowfall (cold!) and gets into trouble when climbs onto the kitchen counter. The cats subtly compete for who gets to sit on the owner’s lap (solution really made me smile). They work together to wake him up early in the morning, when both kitties are hungry (my cats never did paws on the face, but this sure seems to be a thing with most). When a holiday comes around, the cats are curious about festive objects- and this was my favorite episode in the whole book. Tai-Chan turned himself into a mermaid! It was so cute. And the closing pages have Tai-Chan hiding under things- a folded newspaper, a box- to pounce out and surprise the older Sue. But when he crawls under a blanket on the bed, he can’t find his way out again! Sue helps out, and Tai-Chan is the one to get startled now.

Can’t wait to read more of these. Anybody who’s had a cat would love it. Borrowed from the public library. Next book in the series.

Rating: 3/5
128 pages, 2018

Vol. 1

by Konami Kanata

Another set of cute kitty comics, from the author of Chi’s Sweet Home. Just as adorable. The drawings are not quite so realistic as in the Plum Crazy! series I just finished (being more cartoonish), and the storylines are a lot simpler, but I liked it because the cats just do cat things. Tai-Chan is a little black kitten, suddenly thrust upon a homeowner to take care of. He’s already got a cat, the elderly Sue who likes her peace and quiet. Things get lively with a kitten around! Sue can’t seem to get any rest now, as Tai-Chan is full of energy, wants to play all day. Sue is defensive of her territory at first- sleeping spots, food dishes, the litter box. She’s gently exasperated that the kitten doesn’t seem to know the simplest things- what the litter box is for, how to wash his face, what’s good to eat or not. Patiently (for the most part) Sue shows him what to do. The owner tries to get Sue engaged in playing when he brings home new toys for Tai-Chan, but she mostly just sits and watches. Tai-Chan makes a ruckus in the middle of the night (not sleepy) and wakes Sue, who tries to calm things down. My favorite part was when the owner brought home super bouncy balls- that got Sue interested for once! I laughed aloud so much reading this. The watermelon scene was pretty funny too.

Borrowed from the public library. Next book in the series.

Rating: 3/5
128 pages, 2017

Mighty Monarch of the Sea

by Jacques-Yves Cousteau

An older book about whales. It caught my attention at a library sale because I knew this author was famous for being among the first men to film underwater, making early documentaries of sea life. He invented the aqualung (very early type of scuba gear) and some other apparatus that enabled man to explore the oceans. This book is part of a series called The Undersea Discoveries of Jacques-Yves Cousteau, co-authored with Philippe Diolé. I have a few others- the one on sharks and another about coral reefs- and I’d really like to read the one about cephalopods, too.

This book describes a number of ocean expeditions the author made with his team, in pursuit of whales. And when I say pursuit, I really mean that. His attempts to film whales swimming free in the oceans were among the first ever done- they had to find the whales, get close enough and then stay in range. To not loose track of the whales when they dived, they tried to tag buoys on them with several-thousand-plus-foot lines, using light harpoons. Said over and over again that the whales would hardly feel it and were not injured, but I dare say they were bothered a lot, according to how quickly they swam away, and tried to avoid the boats. The team discovered they could hold individual whales in one place by circling them with an outboard motor- the ring of bubbles and noise disorientated the whales (presumably making it hard for them to use their echolocation). When they did this to calves, it’s no wonder the mother whales became aggravated. They found the whales were usually not at all aggressive, taking care to avoid divers in the water with their giant fins, and they often could approach close enough to grab hold and “go for a ride.” They seemed pretty thrilled with this. It was all in the attempt to get film footage of the whales, but honestly from a modern perspective, anyone doing this would be called out for harassing the animals.

That said, they did have some incredible encounters and learned some things about whales that nobody knew before- although the book feels seriously outdated to this reader. In different parts of the book they find and follow around humpbacks, grey whales, right whales, sperm whales, orcas, dolphins, finback whales and others. They rescued a few pelicans found injured, and one with a broken wing. They found a way into some secluded lagoons in Baja California where grey whales give birth and raise their young- didn’t witness a birth, but found many calves nursing, and were closely approached by calves while the mothers napped. Made an attempt to save an injured grey whale calf that had beached, the mother nowhere in sight- but it only lived a few days. There’s descriptions of the gear they used, the differences between the whales, what was known about whale physiology and social behavior (not much on this last point, and some of the information given is just wrong). I was mostly interested in parts about the orcas, to compare to the last book I read, but while Namu was mentioned, and the captivity of orcas criticized, this was only a few pages. There’s lots about the sounds whales make, especially the humpback songs, and how whales reacted to recordings played back to them. The author surmises that soon mankind will decipher the language of whales- well here we are fifty years later, not yet. But currently AI is being used to try and “decode” the sounds that sperm whales make- I have to admit I’m skeptical, but also find this quite exciting.

The author writes a lot in this book about how profoundly emotional he and the team members felt in the presence of the whales, that they often were observed and scrutinized, and in awe of the animals’ great size and apparent gentleness. Just by the way whales would look closely at them, they felt indicated a high intelligence. And they often related maneuvers the whales made as a group to shake off the trailing boats, which pointed at an obvious plan and collaboration among the pod or school. It’s kind of dismaying that with all the respect and admiration they claimed to feel towards the whales, they would still find it okay to lasso a calf, stand on a wild whale’s back, or try to ride it like a horse. I guess they thought it wouldn’t hurt and took pride in the daring of these antics, and I’m sad that this is what stood out to me upon closing the book, when really there are many interesting passages and firsthand observations that were at the time, stunning revelations about whales.

The pictures are somewhat blurred and grainy, but some are quite compelling in spite of that. I think my favorite are three photographs of a wild orca accepting fish from a diver’s hand.

Rating: 3/5
304 pages, 1972

Tales of a Tiger-Striped Cat Vol. 4

by Natsumi Hoshino

Last of the Plum Crazy! books (at least, that my library has available). More daily life of Plum the tabby cat and the younger kitten Snowball. In this one, it seems Snowball has calmed down a lot- hardly any more biting except when she gets very agitated by something, then she takes it out on Plum (like after getting her nails clipped). There’s two episodes in this one- first a flashback of Plum when a kitten, and then of similar incident including Snowball current timeframe- where a cat gets into the ceiling when the panel is opened up during spring cleaning. This was very familiar to me- either I saw something similar in another Japanese cat story, or I once browsed this when at the library? Not sure. In this volume, the cats continue to show more human-like thoughts and motivations- so I didn’t like it quite as much as the first two volumes, but still very cute and funny regardless.

The son’s friend and his older brother keep having conflict over the affections of the kitten they adopted, Oreo (re-named Buck, ugh! Oreo was a better name!) Snowball overhears people talking and thinks she’s going to be put out of the house, so she tries to be on good behavior, but her actions are misconstrued (again) and instead they think she’s sick, acting so unlike her normal self. The cats once again participate in holidays in ways that seem too humanlike- talking about the New Year (funny that it was 2020 in the story, when this book was published in 2010), and what their dreams will mean. They deal with frustrations of doors being closed- with a lot about paper-paneled doors that the cats can tear open (of course they’re not supposed to) and the family tries to figure out how to stop Snowball from destroying the paper door. Snowball searches for the warmest spot when it gets colder (there was a very similar bit in Fuku Fuku). Plum once brings an injured bird into the house. Snowball finally figures out some of “adult cat-speak” (still weird to me) and determines to teach the other kittens the same, but just gets frustrated. Valentine’s Day arrives, but this episode ends up being more about the people in the household- the son and his friend discussing who got chocolates from whom- and feeling left out- so then the cats step in and give the boys chocolates to assuage their feelings.

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 3/5
180 pages, 2010

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All books reviewed on this site are owned by me, or borrowed from the public library. Exceptions are a very occasional review copy sent to me by a publisher or author, as noted. Receiving a book does not influence my opinion or evaluation of it

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