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To Be a Cat

To Be a Cat 1

by Matt Haig and Stacy Curtis
Paperback
Publication Date: 10/06/2014
5/5 Rating 1 Review

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When Barney's feline fantasy comes true, the fur starts flying in this darkly hilarious and heartwarming tale. Cats have it made. They laze in sun patches, are showered with affection by loving humans, can cough up hairballs wherever they want, and never have to wonder why their dad disappeared one day and never came back. It's clearly much easier to be a cat than to be a middle school boy.

So when Barney Willow wishes he could be a cat, and gets his wish, he should be thrilled. Except he's not. He discovers that not all cats are cute and cuddly, and some of them are downright evil. He discovers that his own mother can't see past the whiskers to recognize her darling son. Worst of all, he discovers that his life is in grave danger...and he doesn't have eight lives to spare.
ISBN:
9781442454064
9781442454064
Category:
Fantasy & magical realism (Children's / Teenage)
Format:
Paperback
Publication Date:
10-06-2014
Language:
English
Publisher:
Simon & Schuster
Country of origin:
United States
Pages:
304
Dimensions (mm):
196x132x21mm
Weight:
0.21kg
Matt Haig

Matt Haig is the internationally bestselling author of the novels The Midnight Library, How to Stop Time, The Humans, The Radleys, children's novel A Boy Called Christmas, and memoir Reasons to Stay Alive.

His latest novel is The Life Impossible, which will be published in September 2024. His work has been translated into over fifty languages.

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To Be A Cat is a stand-alone book for young readers by popular British author, Matt Haig. It’s Barney Willow’s twelfth birthday, but it’s hardly what you’d call a happy one. His parents are divorced, and his dad’s been missing, properly missing, since last summer. His mum is sad and a bit manic. He’s constantly picked on, by everyone, from the kids at school, especially that bully Gavin Needle, to the head teacher, Miss Polly Whipmire. He has one good friend, and she’s a girl; she’s not a girlfriend, no. Rissa Fairweather is cool and different and doesn’t care what anyone says about her.

By the end of the schoolday, things are about as bad as they can be: Barney’s got a letter to his Mum from Miss Whipmire. It’s his last warning, threatening expulsion next time he does something wrong. Fair enough if he did something wrong, but it’s Gavin who’s getting up to mischief and blaming him. That is, when Miss Whipmire isn’t reprimanding him for the tiniest thing. When he spots a cat on the way home, he fervently wishes they could swap places. Cats have a great life, don’t they? But don’t they say “Be careful what you wish for”?

The next morning, Barney wakes up as a cat. Actually, that cat. This causes more problems for him than he had ever dreamed were possible, but it turns out he hasn’t swapped bodies with just any cat. He’s now inhabiting a cat that’s in league with Miss Whipmire, and Miss Whipmire is not quite who or what she seems. While Barney is rescued from Miss Whipmire’s filing cabinet (and certain death) by brave and smart Rissa, that’s not the end of the story, and getting people to understand it’s him is, understandably, near impossible.

Young readers (and not so young) will enjoy the hilarious character names, descriptions (which are supplemented in the print version with wonderful illustrations by Stacy Curtis), and the occasional wordplay, as well as a clever plot with an exciting climax. And of course, there’s a worthwhile lesson on self-esteem in there too. This Carnegie Medal Nominee (2013), brilliantly narrated by Chris Pavlo, is a delightful read.

Contains Spoilers No
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