Tag: Animals Fiction

illustrated by David Roberts

by Carolyn Crimi

An alley cat writes an advice column for other animals. She tells a pampered housecat who doesn’t like sardines, sweaters or rides in the doll carriage, that he’s actually got it pretty cushy. She points out to a bored basset hound that he has to go out and find happiness, advises a dizzy hamster who feels like he’s getting nowhere to get off the exercise wheel, lets an overly-talkative parrot know that he needs to learn to listen, and gives a lonely skunk hope that someday he’ll find his own special someone. And a nervous groundhog with stage fright needs encouragement to just shine on his one day in the spotlight. The animals all (mostly) attempt to take her advice, and in the end Tabby finds a perfect solution to improve her own situation as well. Cute, good perspective on things, and made me laugh!

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 4/5
34 pages, 2011

More opinions:
Jen Robinson’s Book Page
anyone else?

by Mélanie Watt

Simple-seeming story about what happens to a wandering housefly when it gets sucked into a vacuum cleaner. I didn’t realize until I was well into the middle of this book that it’s about the stages of grief- in this case, precipitated by an overwhelming life-changing event. I thought it was very well-presented, without the metaphors being overly done. Subtle enough that a child might just enjoy the story for its own face value, not realizing what they’re learning about handling emotions. The packaging on different items in the background, makes it clear what it’s all about- and I thought that was very cleverly done. I was chuckling at their initial presentation with slightly sarcastic labeling details (see the pics) and then nodding sagely at the later iterations.

Detail: “Contains: poisonous chemicals too difficult to spell.” / “Contains: An ounce of doubt and gallons of disbelief”

 

“Ingredients: Ham, carrots, peas, and nasty-tasting hydrogenated potatoes” / “Ingredients: a spoonful of bitterness, a scoop of bad temper and a pinch of revenge”

 

“Sort of feels like cotton.    100% Recycled Paper” / “No regrets.    100% Real Feelings”

 

Love the textured quality of the illustrations, and how you see the fly rearrange and use all the elements around him in the vacuum bag during his entrapment. Differently in each picture spread. A lot of fun just to examine that. Have to look for more by this author/illustrator. She wrote the Scaredy Squirrel books, which I’ve known about but never read actually myself.

Also, there’s a side narrative of sorts, what the family dog does when the bug is in the vacuum. He lost something too, and responds accordingly. I thought that was a nice extra touch.

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 4/5
96 pages, 2015

by Robert T. Bakker

I recall now that I tried reading this book a few years ago, and gave up before finishing the first chapter. Something about the writing style just put me off. I was pleasantly surprised that it was much easier to listen to. Maybe because I could tune out the parts that didn’t quite interest me and focus on what I was doing (usually a puzzle or some household chore), or maybe because some of the duller parts were cut out. There was inclusion of some dramatic music and sounds in the background (rustling leaves, insects, rain, animals screaming, etc) which was sometimes an enhancement, sometimes a distraction. It was also kind of odd to hear a woman’s relatively gentle voice describing scenes with blood, gore and violence- as the dinosaurs were often attacking each other or killing their prey.

It’s about dinosaurs. A female utahraptor is the main character, though the story is told in third person. It’s basically her life story, as she leaves her natal group and strikes out into new territory. How she encounters other utahraptors, forms a new hunting group with a sibling and helps raise its young, finds her own mate and struggles with the conflict- stay with her sibling whom she is strongly bonded to, or follow the pull of a new relationship with the attractive male. She mourns the loss of young, struggles to learn how to survive in a new ecosystem, scavenging along the seashore. Facing new predators, and trying to learn to catch new prey. Really cool was the depiction of a loosely symbiotic relationship with a pterodactyl, an aerial scavenger, which developed gradually over time. I liked that detail. I was kind of surprised at the adamant sense of kinship the raptors felt in this story, and intrigued by the author’s description of how they detected that. The visual imagery, sense of movement and presence of the landscape is keen in this story and sometimes had my attention riveted with the pictures it painted in my mind. But then I’d be distracted by a modern reference, something described as a move in a bowling game, for example. It really threw me out of the narrative several times.

It was interesting to see how self-aware the author made these dinosaurs- and the contrast in their minds between instinct and reason or emotion. (I think the only other book I’ve read that explores that so clearly is Ratha’s Creature and its sequels). But then there were constant references to the future (to this story) arrival of humankind, pointing out over and over that unlike any other animal, only humans were self-aware, could look into the past, etc. Felt a bit inconsistent.

Borrowed from the public library, audiobook abridged version. Narrated by Megan Gallagher, 2 hours 52 minutes listening time. (Disappointingly, this means I might have missed out on quite a lot- one of the online reviews says that the audiobook version is only two or three hours long, only has a few chapters, and ruins the story with its incompleteness. I did feel like a lot of the chapters started and/or ended abruptly, so now I really wonder what was missing). Completed on 1/4/24 (some of my catch-up has gotten out of order).

Rating: 3/5
250 pages, 1995

Cows That Type

by Doreen Cronin

This book is really silly, but I can see why it’s so popular and made it onto that puzzle collage. And it’s become a whole series- I might just go look for more of them, while I’m still in need of easy things to read. So these farmer’s cows have discovered an old typewriter in the barn and figured out how to use it. The clacking noise is annoying enough, but then one day the cows start writing the farmer notes. Insisting that he do things to improve the farm, to their benefit. Next the chickens join in with their own demands. When the farmer does nothing, the cows and chickens go on strike, refusing to give him milk and eggs. He tries to solve this problem using the duck as an intermediary- but finds in the end, that while he’s resolved his initial disagreement with the cows, other difficulties are on the horizon. All because of a typewriter. Made me laugh.

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 3/5
32 pages, 2000

Vol. 4

by Konomi Wagata

Next in that manga series about the boy who got hit by a car, switched bodies with a cat. Still has the rehash of the incident at the start of every chapter, but now it’s just a page or less, so not as annoying. Somehow, this volume wasn’t quite as amusing to me. Cute, but the jokes not so funny. Maybe I’m not in the right mood. Then again, there were a few stand-alone pages at the back I assume were supposed to be jokes, which I did not get at all. It must be a cultural thing that didn’t translate well.

Most of this volume is just everyday life, mundane little things. The boy-as-cat runs afoul of some mean boys on the street which makes him nervous, but then gets chased by street cats, who are much nastier. He tries to help his gawky girl find her misplaced cell phone (by posing with it and meowing) and then she is so startled by his cuteness, she drops it (damage). He decides he should be useful to her by protecting the household (in lieu of a guard dog) but can’t do that very well, so resorts to his former role of being “a healing presence”. Chika gushes over photos of cats posing in drawers on her phone, so he tries to do the same, with mishaps (being mortally embarrassed at opening her underwear drawer, and then getting accidentally shut inside a kitchen drawer). He tries to skip like a human, (to be seen in a cute pose) and is just clumsy. He tries to help a lost dog get found again. Through all this, musing constantly that he has to figure out how to become human again, while never really doing anything about it.

Then! in the final pages, he happens across a kid on the street- and it’s him. His boy self. Who just stares. Swats at dangling things on a shrub. Lies down suddenly on a public bench for a nap, and leaps up to grab at coins somebody drops. Another kid from school is there watching him and talks to him, but he doesn’t reply. Nyao-the-cat doesn’t get what’s going on, but I did- the boy- obviously- has the cat mind inside him. So he acts like a cat. Funny. And the volume ends there. Of course now it got interesting again, but my library doesn’t have any further volumes. I know there’s at least a fifth one.

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 3/5
192 pages, 2016

Vol. 3

by Wataru Nadatani

Third in this cat manga series. I found this one just as amusing and cute as the others, maybe a little better in the storyline. Riko buys a new videogame and is eager to play it straight through to the end in as few days as possible. So she whittles her schedule down to bare essentials, cutting time wherever she can- especially with sleep. She had forgotten to reckon with Musubi though, who runs around the house at night and then steps on her head super early in the morning, disrupting her plan. Riko goes through her first experience trimming the cat’s claws, and then becomes convinced she needs to bathe him. Both experiences go differently than she’d expected! The cat’s viewpoint on his nail trimming was funny. Musubi looses his favorite ball behind furniture, which sends Riko on a search through the apartment for all the missing toys. (And then he immediately whacks it back into an inaccessible corner again). More gaming time. One scene made me chuckle: Riko is conversing with her fellow gamers in a chat, and Musubi walks across the keyboard, changing her message. Isn’t that exactly like a cat. Riko gets sick and stays in bed all day- playing video games, of course. (One that looks just like Minecraft, but of course has a different name). She has a weird dream where Musubi joins her in the game. Later, recovered and out shopping, she spies a new product- traditional style hat for cats. Even though she’s learned that cats don’t need, and usually don’t like, clothes, it’s too cute to pass up. She tries to get photos of Musubi in the hat, but he protests repeatedly. The final episode in the book is about a new toy Riko gets for her cat- a “kicking bear” the cat can grapple with on the floor. He goes at it so enthusiastically that the thing is soon torn. She attempts to sew it back up, with lamentable results. The cat’s viewpoint on this bit was funny, too. Throughout the whole narrative, Riko relates to everything by applying her gamer terms. I think it fit better in this volume, at least, I enjoyed it more for some reason.

Borrowed from the public library. I’m disappointed I can’t read the rest of these- the series has at least eight volumes, but their collection stops here. (I’m going to ask if they’ll acquire the rest. I like them, but not quite enough to want to buy the set).

 

Rating: 3/5
168 pages, 2019

Vol. 2

by Wataru Nadatani

These books are fairly simplistic, but quite cute and amusing if you are into gaming (or know people who are, like me). And sometimes you just want a nice, easy read.

Volume two picks up right where the first one left off, with Riko standing in shock at her desk while a co-worker muses aloud who could be the writer behind the cute tuxedo-cat’s social media account. She’s at first insulted that the other woman spies things in the background of the photos to criticize- a mess all over the place, leavings from takeout and video games scattered and stacked everywhere- but then hugely relieved when the assumption is made that this must indicate the cat is owned by a man. As if women aren’t gamers, ha.

She goes home to continue leveling up in her games, while learning more about what her cat needs. When the kitten (named Musubi) interferes with her screen time yet again, she finds a cat game it can swat at on a touchscreen, and then gets into trying to beat the cat at the game. There’s an unexpected visit from Riko’s sister, who is obsessed with earning “likes” on her social media account- and wants photo opportunities with Riko’s cat. Who hides. The sisters argue about some past friction between them, then Riko challenges her sibling to fight her in a videogame, and they dive into that.

Sister gone, she spends more days alone with her cat, then is upset one day after work to find that Musubi has grown enough to jump onto counters and other heights- constantly knocking some of her character figurines off a shelf. She has to figure out how to deal with that, pays another visit to the pet store, and ends up buying a cat tower setup for Musubi. Who of course continues to prefer climbing the curtains or sitting in the box (at least for a while). Riko looks at what other people post about their cats online, and momentarily is convinced she has to get clothes for her cat. She chats with the pet store employee more, and ends up invited to her house to see what that lady provides for her cats. Riko feels uncertain about this invitation, but is determined to scope out an expert’s “personal cat environment,” as she calls it. (The shop employee, for her part, likes talking to Riko but is still often baffled by her frequent use of videogame terminology). Riko is surprised during her visit to see all kinds of things she never dreamed were made for cats- cozy round cat beds, cat flaps in the door and a toy tunnel are all new to her. I share her astonishment at the catwalk up by the ceiling! Like in this house. She balks at all the excess of stuff, but agrees that her cat should probably have a collar with identifying tags. And the book wraps up with once again admiring the cat for his cuteness, even when he’s in the way (sleeping with his head on her remote).

The author used her own cat as a model for the drawings, and you can tell- the proportions, gestures and cat expressions are spot-on. Many of the chapters have a page or two at the end that show things from the cat’s viewpoint- these didn’t add much to the story for me, personally, but that’s not a big deal. I liked all the rest of it.

Rating: 3/5
176 pages, 2019

by Wataru Nadatani

Yet another cute cat manga series. This one is about a woman who works in an office, and is literally just there for the job. She does it efficiently and immediately goes home to dive into her favorite passtime- video gaming. Especially online role-playing games. She rarely socializes at work, doesn’t talk about her personal life, always refuses offers by co-workers to have drinks or go to events. Nobody knows her. They’re all shocked- herself included- when she spontaneously adopts a stray kitten found in the office parking lot. Riko doesn’t know anything about taking care of cats. It’s a steep learning curve. The kitten is adorable and energetic, and often interferes with her game time- whether distracting her, or actually stepping on buttons- sometimes loosing all the work she’s done. She finds it really frustrating, but can’t help herself falling in love with the kitten. Even starts taking photos of him and shares them online- and then is appalled to discover one of her co-workers follows her kitten’s social media account! I thought that was one of the funniest parts in the book. I don’t know why she didn’t tell them it was her cat, but maybe she’s just so used to keeping everything private, or was embarrassed at the “cat talk” she came up with to narrate the photos. It was also really odd when she started referring to things with gamer terminology in the pet store- I was right alongside that employee, baffled. Funny, though. Not much to the plot- it’s the two of them getting used to each other, daily life kind of thing. I’m not a gamer but my kids and my ex are, so I was familiar with aspects of Riko’s passion. This was a nice lighthearted read. And the drawings of the cat are very well done- especially his face and expressions.

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 3/5
192 pages, 2019

by Susan Wilson

Surprised that I liked this book- honestly I thought it was going to be cheesy. Well, it was a little- towards the end- but for the most part, it was better than I expected. The constant theme of a surly teenager reluctant to have anything to do with her parent, and who rides horses, reminded me much of Riding Lessons and Flying Changes. But this book is about a dog. And a man, a powerful executive from unfortunate beginnings he’d prefer not to remember, pretty much built his life up from nothing and is proud of that. One day in a fit of arrogance and anger he strikes his secretary and gets charged with assault. In the ensuing lawsuit, he looses not only his multiple homes and most of his assets, but his wife and daughter, ending up seeing the latter only once a week. He’s ordered by the court to do community service at a homeless shelter. He finds the work there demeaning and unpleasant to say the least. Resentful and constantly defensive (in a just barely subtle way), until the dog comes into the picture. Then things slowly start to change.

The dog is a pit bull type that was raised in a cellar, trained to fight, and bears the scars, both mentally and physically. When animal cruelty investigators bust the place, he manages to escape and wanders the streets for a while until getting caught again and put in the shelter. Where he’s in the last cage of the row- fated to be euthanized (nobody thinks he can be rehabilitated or adopted out). But the two have an unexpected encounter, and the dog finds himself in this man’s care. Unlikely as it seems- the man lives in a small apartment and has never cared for a pet before- they gradually build a relationship. At first the ex-executive wants to hand the dog off to someone else, or return it to the shelter, but he soon realizes the dog doesn’t have any other options. And then when an opportunity does come to get rid of the dog, he finds he doesn’t want to anymore. He’s surprised to find himself attempting to communicate with Chance (as he eventually gets named), and even more surprised to find his teenage daughter thawing towards him, because of the dog. He starts to chat with some people he sees every day in the neighborhood, even make a few friends (with folks he never would have given more than a nod or glance, before). Chance just might bring more good into his life than anyone ever expected. And give him the ability to become a different person.

This story is really heartwarming. A bit cheesy, but not overwhelmingly so. It helped that things happened at a constrained pace, that seemed more realistic (no sudden overhaul of character, instant flip just because of the dog). Some chapters are told from the dog’s viewpoint, which were my favorite parts. A different type of voice than I’ve encountered in other animal-viewpoint narratives (it was quite reminiscent of Top Dog by Jerry Jay Carroll), but I liked it.

Rating: 3/5
312 pages, 2010

Vol. 3

by Konomi Wagata

Third in this cat manga series. More repetitive recaps, sigh. Nyao muses further about why he turned into a cat, and how to get back, but still makes no progress on actually doing something about it. He’s momentarily shocked when Chika wonders if he’s human in there, because some of his behavior is decidedly un-catlike. For some reason, this impels him to suddenly get into what he thinks is a bunch of feline mischief. (I don’t know why he wanted to prove to her he was a cat, but still, it was funny). He tries to get Chika to brush his teeth, but is misunderstood. He has negative interactions what that other tabby in the neighborhood (mostly through a window). He does some more sleuthing around when Chika’s out- goes to his old school dorm, to the hospital- but finds out very little. Even though in the cat body, he can still read, and is thrilled when one day Chika’s friend is visiting, and opens his favorite manga series. But of course she just gets annoyed with him pawing at the pages. He has to get his claws trimmed which is upsetting for both Nyao and Chika, so she gets him a scratching pad- and the introduction of that is, of course, amusing. More attempts at doing human things, or communicating with Chika, but he only looks cute, with intentions awkwardly misconstrued- which Chika thinks is also cute, and so life continues. More lazy days, puzzling over how to solve his problem, while slowly becoming content with things as they are- being feline and looked after is rather pleasant, after all. Will he give up his desire to return to his old self? This volume seems to be leaning that way.

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 3/5
192 pages, 2016

DISCLAIMER:

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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