"The Nine Emotional Lives of Cats," follows Jeffrey Moussaiff Masson as he adopts five cats and explores some of the psychological myths regarding cats such as aloofness, laziness, and inability to love. Some parts of this book are helpful and interesting like chapter four on "Attachment," others are downright ridiculous tack-ons from the previous chapter, like "Curiosity," and "Playfulness," but are enjoyable for the descriptive writing.
However, I checked the date of publication and was promptly horrified by how dated some of the material turned out. First, there is record of inter-species play beyond human initiated contact. Dolphins, chimps, wolves, some of the big cats, and some rodent species, regularly engage in inter-species play as children. Second, cat noises have indeed been researched and as recently as '02 we know a lot more about a cat's purr.
Secondly, this guy acknowledges he just let five predators run loose on an island unused to predators because he can't bear to contain his cats. I love cats (I have three), but I know my ability to have them comes from living in an area where it is safe to let one out (two are disabled and never going outside and one is the King of Wharf Rat Death) No wonder the cats eventually leave this guy. Containing them for the first year AT LEAST makes a cat far less likely to just wander off on you. And really, I don't recommend in any way letting your cat out without you. I am confident walking my cat around the block, but I wouldn't let him do it on his own. Think about it, the action fosters independence in a species famed for its own independence. (And if you're in New Zealand, way to wipe out the natural ecosystem). Duh. I may not be fond of birds, but I don't value my cat's freedom over a sustainable ecosystem.
(For the record I was also unsuccessful in belling my cat, but I live in an area where songbirds are wary, the crows vicious, and the seagulls can aptly defend themselves. The same robin has been taunting my cat for two years and warns every chickadee in the neighborhood when my cat comes outside. He doesn't need a bell, he's more watched than a convenience store cash register. If I'm inside, he's inside)
Of course cats need more to love you than acting like a cat. Also, if you lock them out of the human sleeping area its one less link in the chain of attachment, you're not letting come back to the colony bed! Again, duh.
By the way, my cats come when I call. It can be done, and it is totally necessary if you are letting your cat out.
Moreover, cats do feel jealousy outside of one another as anyone who had a cat before they had a gf or bf knows this. Its nice his cats didn't get jealous of other people, but don't expect that as a rule in your own.
And lastly, this guy only follows the cats for the first year. I don't think you could write about the emotional lives of any species and claim its complete once childhood is over.
This book is great if you just got a cat, I agree completely on many aspects, like the chapter on "Narcissism," but if your cat is beyond the teen angst years (3+) its not a very good glimpse into the mind of a cat, or a responsible cat owner. The writing is on par with an Animal Planet announcer, somewhere between terribly amusing and downright head shaking, but it is, a heart, a genuinely well intended book and more helpful than not I suppose.