Overworked salaryman Matoi Souta is mentally, physically, and emotionally at the end of his tether…so much so that for a moment he even contemplates suicide as an extreme measure of finally getting some rest. To ward off this alarming thought, he decides to go watch Kōdan (a traditional Japanese form of storytelling) on a whim. Entranced by the storyteller’s tale, his style of narration, his mesmerizing voice…for a while Souta feels revived.
He wonders, however, if the exhaustion still lingers because unless he was very much mistaken, Kihachi, the storyteller definitely looked like an actual cat in a kimono at one point of time!
But Souta is not wrong, for Kihachi is a Bakaneko (a supernatural cat of Japanese folklore) and no one except Souta has been able to see Kihachi’s true form. Bakaneko laws demand that should a mortal see the creature in its true form, they are fatally linked and should form an eternal bond or both can be killed off immediately.
And thus begins the love story between a human and a supernatural cat.
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The Japanese really love their cats, don’t they?
And how? How do these guys do it? How do they take such an improbable premise and turn it into one of the most affectionate, caring, non-toxic and healing love stories that I have read in a long time?
While the book is rich with fantasy, and brimming with cats (mais oui!), it is more about how the two emotionally unsure and lost beings bring a degree of solace, security, and affection into each other’s lives.
Funny at most places, heartbreaking at some…The Cat Proposed was an unexpectedly strong and memorable read.