She and Her Cat: Stories / Makoto Shinkai, Ginny Taplet Takemori (Translator), Naruki Nagakawa

She and Her Cat: Stories
By: Makoto Shinkai, Ginny Taplet Takemori (Translator), Naruki Nagakawa
Genre: Short Stories
Number of Pages: 144
Published: January 23, 2024 (1st Published June 21, 2012)
Publisher: Washington Square Press
Dates Read: December 31, 2025
Format: Paperback

She and Her Cat is a collection of four interrelated short stories about four women and their feline companions.

Of course I grabbed this book. It’s not only about cats, but the cover alone has a woman reading in her bed with her cat on her chest (which is literally how I read this book myself).

The first story is about Chobi and being rescued from a soggy, wet box in the pouring rain by Miyu. Chobi cares about his human more than anything and watches over her as she goes through the ups and downs of a relationship. He loves her so much that he even calls her his girlfriend! When Miyu is heartbroken, Chobi is stressed he can’t help her, but he knows he can live his days by her side and everything will be okay.

The second story is about Mimi, a stray cat who was abandoned as a kitten. She was the runt of the litter and hard of hearing, but she’s determined to make it on her own. She meets Reina, an art student who is struggling on her own. We also meet a few more neighborhood cats, Kink Tail, whom Mimi has a romantic encounter with (after Chobi denied her since he already had a girlfriend). 

The third story is about Aioi and Cookie, Mimi’s kitten. Aioi is grieving the loss of her best friend, Mari, and her mother gets her the kitten, Cookie, to keep her company. At first Aioi’s grief is all consuming, but Cookie wiggles her way into her heart.
She and Her Cat are about the comfort a pet, especially a cat, can provide and how adopting a stray will not only change your life but theirs as well. I loved how they were all connected and how cats from one story would show up in another. Any cat lover is bound to smile while reading these stories.

Mornings Without Mii / Mayumi Inaba, Ginny Takemori (Translator)

Mornings Without Mii
By: Mayumi Inaba, Ginny Tapley Takemori (Translator)
Genre: Nonfiction, Memoir
Number of Pages: 192
Published: February 25, 2025 (1st Published January 1, 1999)
Publisher: FSG Originals
Dates Read: May 4, 2025 - May 7, 2025
Format: Library Book / Paperback

Trigger Warnings: cat in distress, missing cat, aging cat

In 1977, Mayumi Inaba heard tiny cries carried by the breeze of the river. When she follows the sound she finds a small newborn kitten dangling high in the fence – clearly placed there by someone. Overcome with affection, Inaba takes the kitten back to her apartment, names her Mii, and thus the inseparable bond begins.

Over the next twenty years Inaba talked about her life as she goes through changes and compromises, but the one thing that is always there is her cat, Mii.

So, I have mixed feelings about this book. Some parts of it I absolutely loved and related to; like Inaba straight up buying a condo because finding one to rent with Mii was too hard, cause that’s something I would absolutely do, and the midnight walks through the hallway with her cat – I absolutely did that with my cat, Mushi, in college when I needed a break from homework.

Then when Inaba talked about Mii getting stuck up in a tree and how she let her be stuck there so she could hear her little cries slightly broke me, because I hear one off pitched cry from either of my cats, I’m running to them to see what’s going on. My heart also ached for Mii at the end of her life – her quality of life was horrible and as much as I desperately want my cats to be with me for as long as time allows, they shouldn’t be suffering like Mii. Oh – and not getting Mii spayed!

Overall I both enjoyed and had my heart break while reading this. I do understand this was Inada’s first cat and it’s also set in 80’s/90’s Japan, but some things I think she could have handled so much better.

*Thank you FSG Originals and NetGalley for a digital copy of this book in exchange for an honest review