Alex Howard - Library Cat

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Library Cat: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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For the last year, Library Cat – the resident cat of Edinburgh University Library – has been watching. As a Human, you may not feel that watching is a particularly extraordinary thing for a cat to do. But Library Cat is different. Because not only was Library Cat watching, he was also thinking.
Library Cat is a thinking cat. Thinking cats are rare. Look closely, though, and maybe you’ll spot one… The canny glint to the eye? The arched, disdainful whiskers? The unrelenting interest in books and piles of paper? That’s a thinking cat!
This is a story about Library Cat, about his favourite turquoise chair in the library and his favourite food (bacon-rind). But, more importantly, this is a story about Library Cat’s thoughts and his own search for completeness in this fractured world.
And it’s about us Humans, too. You see, with his black and white head bobbing a foot off the ground, Library Cat has seen us Humans from a very different angle…
…and he’s seen it all; from shame to sandwiches, from litter to love, from aeroplanes to Lord Byron.
And he has some news: he thinks us Humans have it all wrong. And he’s going to show us why.
LIBRARY CAT is a funny, witty and irreverent look at the world, seen through the unusually observant eyes of Edinburgh University Library’s resident cat.

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картинка 60 Recommended Reading

Poetry for Dummies by John Timpane.

картинка 61 Food consumed

Catnip / spider.

картинка 62 Mood

Euphoric, creative.

Discovery about Humans They can be at their most creative when - фото 63 Discovery about Humans

They can be at their most creative when procrastinating.

Crepuscular

in which our hero ponders language and fears for Humans Night had fallen as - фото 64
…in which our hero ponders language and fears for Humans

Night had fallen as the two cats nosed their way surreptitiously out of the Towsery and down the long web of narrow, hidden corridors to the library foyer. They were hungry, having only consumed the odd insect all afternoon, and their lust for snoozing and reading had worn thin, as hunger started to replace it, irritating their tummies and diverting their imaginations. Library Cat craved the saltiness of dried food, while Biblio Chat stated his intention for bird, perhaps pigeon – at any rate something un peu plus délicate than rodent.

As they nosed their way into the centre of the foyer, however, a sight of horror met their eyes. Students were everywhere in a blur with motion. Some were dropping big fat highlighter pens and papers which fanned out into great carpets of white on the floor; others were dodging each other to get to large grey machines which whirred and spat out yet more papers. The sheer sight of the motion made Library Cat feel queasy. Indeed, everyone was so preoccupied about the business of submitting essays that they hardly noticed Library Cat and Biblio Cat, weaving their double helix among various ankles and shoes, in their irrevocable progression towards the exit. As the cats neared the front door, Library Cat’s curiosity got the better of him and he paused to eavesdrop on a telephone conversation.

“Yah, I’m screwed… I’m, like, so screwed. I’m really, really screwed. I was out until, like, four, and then, like, I forgot I had this second deadline for this other essay and, like, now I’ve got the deadline in, like, TEN minutes. Now I just need to quickly print it. But if I miss the deadline, like, I’m going to be, like, so screwed for this course that I mightaswelljustlike, drop out of uni.”

Library Cat was appalled, on many levels, but most markedly at the student’s unrefined rhetoric. He was so appalled in fact that he had to organise his responses to the overheard conversation into the following list:

1. Use repetition and intensifiers sparingly. It would have been sufficient to have just said “I’m screwed” rather than “I’m so screwed”, and then, “I’m really, really screwed”.

2. Drop some of that ham sandwich you’re eating, it looks tasty.

3. Calm down, you’ll give yourself an embolism.

4. Address your preoccupation with the word “like”.

5. Avoid histrionics. You will be calmer yourself, and seem more sincere, if you avoid pointless, indulgent affirmations of impending failure. It is unlikely a late essay will mean expulsion from university.

6. Tie your shoelaces, they are making me want to pounce.

7. Respect time. Avoid recruiting time simply to ameliorate the terms of your story. Less is more, in this respect.

8. Stop standing by the door, you’re letting the cold into the library.

9. Avoid split infinitives: it’s ‘to print quickly’ not ‘to quickly print’.

Before Library Cat could think any more there was a tap on the back by another student, this time a man, with a friendly face. Behind him, the door swung shut, and the door in front, where the girl had been standing, swung shut as well. All at once one of Library Cat’s greatest fears had befallen him: entrapment. With the doors immediately ahead and behind closed, he was trapped in a kind of liminal foyer space that served no purpose. And to make matters worse, now this male student was attempting to initiate conversation with him, except he was going about it in a deeply strange manner. Instead of addressing him as a brainless animal in the condescending manner that most Humans do, this student was instead attempting to “talk” in a series of meows and mews and purrs as if this might somehow dissolve the communicative barrier that has endured between cat and Human since the time of the Egyptians, and suddenly prompt Library Cat into a great mellifluous outpouring of reassurance and wisdom that would appease the Human’s guilt at having started her essay so late in the day.

“Caticus Domesticus! You don’t have to worry about the atomic properties of caesium and all-nighters do you? Lucky wee b*****d. Here, puss, puss, puss, puss! Look at me! Puss, puss, puss. Meow, meeeeow, meeeeeow. Hey UP HERE. Puss, puss, puss, puss, puss…”

Oh jog on , thought Library Cat, seizing the opportunity offered by a Human walking through the main door to make a dash for the square.

Outside, the bitter evening hit Library Cat like a train. An iciness encircled his whiskers making them ridged like little frosted twigs. He scanned the square for Biblio Chat. It wasn’t long before he spied his cousin. A little way off, between the black railings, Biblio Chat was enveloped in a cloud of blue-grey features as a scuffle between him and a pigeon ground ever closer to a conclusion. Presently, much to Library Cat’s surprise, the pigeon wriggled free, running a feathery zigzag along the grass, until finally lumbering up into the air like a perilously overweight cargo aircraft. Library Cat sniggered inwardly as he watched the very tip of his cousin’s tail switch with annoyance. He walked over…

“Meow?”

“Miaou,” replied Biblio Chat despondently.

Library Cat’s heart softened. He was at once sadistically pleased that his cousin had been outsmarted by a bird, while at the same time sympathetic towards his frustration and defeat. He’d been there after all. All cats had been there. He nuzzled his cousin’s coat in an act of kinship. As the two cats walked silently back across the square, both hungry and with the cold cobbles nipping the undersides of their paws, Library Cat thought back to the students and wondered if they ever found time to relax. He had heard it said that students do nothing but relax, but then again, the sight he had just seen thoroughly disproved such an assertion. Is it that they don’t pace themselves? Or oscillate wildly from one extreme to the other? Do they go back to their flats and breathe clear air, free from the demons of anxiety, loneliness and despair that so often unsheathe their invisible daggers in the hideous echoes of silence? Are their homes warm? Are they greeted by nice flatmates? Or are they met with a blaze of ice, slamming doors and passive-aggressiveness? A closed-room culture of segregated fridge compartments and alienation?

A sudden sadness hit Library Cat. He had a horrible feeling that the Humans had forgotten how to live. He had been to the neighbouring Edinburgh districts of Marchmont and Sciennes on adventures sometimes. They had seemed, superficially at least, quite wonderful. He’d gazed up at ambient rooms where posters of Le Chat Noir hung beneath fairy cake ceiling cornices and thought these student Humans are doing it right. He’d walked along the moss-linted pavement and watched cars quaintly lumber over the street humps, their wheels on the cobbles sounding like waves washing up the seashore. The tenements at night faced each other serenely, some bandaged in scaffolding, others adorned with moulded cornucopia that illuminated ethereally in the moonlight. Everything was tinged with a lovely flavour; it was the flavour of elsewhere .

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