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Mornings Without Mii

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A beloved Japanese modern classic that chronicles the author's twenty-year bond with her cat, meditating on solitude, independence, and the writing life.

On a cool summer evening in 1977, Mayumi Inaba hears a forlorn cry carried by the breeze of Tokyo's Tamagawa River. She follows the sound to find a newborn kitten, just the size of her palm, dangling from a fence, abandoned. Overcome by tender affection, she takes the cat back to the small apartment she shares with her husband and christens her Mii, and so begins an ineffable bond.

Over the next twenty years, we follow Inaba, a poet and novelist by moonlight, through a lifetime of choices and compromises made in pursuit of quiet, solitude, and a space to create. Through it all, her cat, a formidably independent creature in her own right, is her confidante and muse.

From the late Mayumi Inaba, the winner of the Kawabata Yasunari Prize and the Tanizaki Prize, Mornings Without Mii is more than a love letter to feline companionship—it is a probing, stirring meditation on the forces that enable us to connect, to create, and to build a life.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from December 9, 2024
      In this soulful account, Inaba (1950–2014) recounts her 20-year relationship with her cat, Mii. After finding an abandoned kitten on a Tokyo fence one evening, Inaba impulsively decided to take it home with her. “Maybe it was because my defenses were down,” she writes. “I set off walking without a second thought.” As financial stresses started to fracture Inaba’s marriage, the author took solace in her pet, pulling herself through drunken nights of self-loathing with “the sight of Mii waiting patiently for me in the dark.” The book’s middle section rapturously recounts Inaba and Mii’s evening walks, their afternoons spent admiring the Tokyo skyline, and, as Mii started to fall ill, their meditative trips to the countryside. As Mii’s life comes to an end, Inaba avoids cliché, cataloging her newfound spiritual resilience instead of wallowing in grief: “My mornings without Mii would start tomorrow,” Inaba writes. “I might weep, but I wouldn’t mourn.” This is a must-read for pet lovers with sturdy hearts. Agent: Bruno Onuki Reynell, New River Literary.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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