Ratings146
Average rating3.7
Our narrator’s days are numbered. Estranged from his family, living alone with only his cat Cabbage for company, he was unprepared for the doctor’s diagnosis that he has only months to live. But before he can set about tackling his bucket list, the Devil appears with a special offer: in exchange for making one thing in the world disappear, he can have one extra day of life. And so begins a very bizarre week . . . Because how do you decide what makes life worth living? How do you separate out what you can do without from what you hold dear? In dealing with the Devil our narrator will take himself – and his beloved cat – to the brink. Genki Kawamura's If Cats Disappeared from the World is a story of loss and reconciliation, of one man’s journey to discover what really matters in modern life. This beautiful tale is translated from the Japanese by Eric Selland, who also translated The Guest Cat by Takashi Hiraide. Fans of The Guest Cat will also surely love If Cats Disappeared from the World.
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This book had a nice, quirky concept but its execution was weak.
Our protagonist is informed of his impending death and offered a deal with the devil: for every extra day he is alive, he needs to choose something that will totally disappear from the world. From this setup, I was expecting to read heart-wrenching moral dilemmas about the ethics of making things disappear for the whole world while wanting to eke out a few more moments out of life. I also thought I would be getting a deep exploration of grief when confronted so directly with one's own mortality. Instead, it was pretty blah.
The main character is selfish and apathetic and doesn't seem to consider any opinions, thoughts or feelings outside of his own when choosing the things that can disappear. Granted, by the end, the devil is the one choosing which things disappear (no surprise here, he is the devil after all). However, even then he should have considered what it would mean when he accepted the bargain. For example, when he is considering whether or not to make movies disappear, he doesn't seem to think about what that absence would mean for his ex-girlfriend - who loves movies so much she now lives above a cinema. What would the absence of movies mean for her? Will she forever feel incomplete? He neither considers no cares about what the answers to these questions are. The protagonists self-centredness would be okay if the book was seeking to highlight how inherently selfish humans really are, but by the end, we are supposed to buy the idea that humans are actually selfless because the protagonist cannot bring himself to make cats disappear. However, even that final decision is selfish, he doesn't decide to keep cats around because he's thinking of other people, he seems to do it because of the sentimental value cats hold for him . Besides, he hardly seems remorseful for the other things he made disappear.
Additionally, there seem to be no real-world implications for the things that disappear. How did the world not come grinding down to a halt when the clocks disappeared. What happened to all the people who worked in phone manufacturing, or in the movie industry, or even in the clock industry. Millions of people must supposedly have woken up unemployed. How did the world simply go on, when big changes had been made. I think this concept would have worked better if each bargain gave him an additional 2 months - 1 year, then he could really sit with and consider the impacts of his decisions, see how the world was different because of the self-interested choices he had made.
This book promised to deliver one man's journey of self-discovery, but in my opinion, it fell short.
It was just so boring. I hate the writing so much. The main character finds out he's going to die and the devil appears in front of him. Devil who wears a Hawaiian shirt and will be called “Aloha” from then on by the protagonist. Cringe.
Guy is literally about to die and in his conversation with the devil the author chose to use a very childish, funny (at least, I'm guessing that was the intention, but the result is just cringe-y) tone. Hello?? You're literally dying and talking to devil??? Devil whom, by the way, it's not the devil, it's a joke.
The writing is very repetitive, which I did not expect in such a short book, nor found necessary: the same things are repeated over and over with no real reason, making the book really boring and “heavy” to read.
There are many more things that I hated about this book, like the fact that the protagonist's cat calls him “sir”. Tesò, non capisci un cazzo di gatti e si vede. Or the fact that the book's message ends up to be “you've realized how beautiful life is” (or something like that; it's a sentence that the devil says. The devil. Hence, he's a joke.) Ma anche basta con queste cavolate buoniste, dai.
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