Kitty Cornered is raucous and witty and as heartwarming as a basket of kittens. I'm a bone-i-fied dog lover, but this book settles it: I'm getting a cat, or six."
--Dan Dye, author of Amazing Gracie Bob Tarte had his first encounter with a cat when he was two and a half years old. He should have learned his lesson then, from Fluffy. But as he says, "I listened to my heart instead, and that always leads to trouble." In this tell-all of how the Tarte household grew from one recalcitrant cat to six--including a hard-to-manage stray named Frannie--Tarte confesses to allowing these interlopers to shape his and his wife's life, from their dining habits to their sleeping arrangements to the placement and furriness of their furniture. But more than that, Bob begins seeing Frannie and the other cats as unlikely instructors in the art of achieving contentment, even in the face of illness and injury. Bewitched by the unknowable nature of domesticated cats, he realizes that sometimes wildness and mystery are exactly what he needs.
With the winning humor and uncanny ability to capture the soul of the animal world that made
Enslaved by Ducks a success, Tarte shows us that life with animals gives us a way out of our narrow human perspective to glimpse something larger, more enduring, and more grounded in the simplicities of love--and catnip.
Author: Bob Tarte
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Algonquin Books
Published: 04/10/2012
Pages: 304
Weight: 0.7lbs
Size: 8.20h x 5.50w x 0.90d
ISBN: 9781565129993
Review Citation(s): Publishers Weekly 01/02/2012 pg. 67
Foreword 02/29/2012
Kirkus Reviews 03/01/2012
Booklist 03/15/2012 pg. 10
Shelf Awareness 04/03/2012
About the AuthorTarte, Bob: - Bob Tarte wrote for
The Beat magazine for twenty years. He has also written for the
New York Times, the
Boston Globe, the
Miami New Times, the
Whole Earth Review, and other publications. He hosts the
What Were You Thinking? podcast for petliferadio.com. He and his wife Linda live in Lowell, Michigan, and currently serve the whims of parrots, ducks, geese, parakeets, a rabbit, doves, hens, one turkey, and way too many cats.