She and Her Cat: Stories

For fans of Mieko Kawakami’s Breasts and Eggs and Murata Sayaka’s Earthlings, this Japanese bestseller from renowned anime director Makoto Shinkai features four inspirational and heartwarming vignettes following women and their cats in their quests for love and connection.

Lying alone on the edge of the sidewalk in an abandoned cardboard box, a nameless narrator contemplates the indifferent world around him. With his mother long gone, his only company is the sound of the nearby train. Just as he fears that the end is near, a young woman peers down at him, this fateful encounter changing their lives forever.

So begins the first story in She and Her Cat, a collection of four interrelated, stream-of-conscious short stories in which four women and their feline companions explore the frailty of life, the pain of isolation, and the limits of communication.

With clever narration alternating between the cats and their owners, She and Her Cat offers a unique and sly commentary on human foibles and our desire for connection. A whimsical short story anthology unlike any other, it effortlessly demonstrates that even in our darkest, most lonesome moments, we are still united to this wonderous world—often in ways we could never have expected.

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Published Nov 22, 2022

144 pages

Average rating: 7.27

11 RATINGS

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Community Reviews

hershyv
Apr 03, 2026
9/10 stars
Throughout She and Her Cat, I found myself smiling in every possible way, happy, sad, wistful, soft, slightly heartbroken, all of it. It’s such a charming, wholesome, lovingly written book. The story follows four interconnected women in the same neighborhood and how their lives shift for the better after they cross paths with their cats and a dog. What makes it extra special and a bit of work, depending on your preference, is the narration, you hear from both the women and their cats, which somehow makes everything feel more intimate and a little magical without trying too hard. You do have to pause at each new section and figure out who’s speaking, but honestly, that’s the only effort required. The stories themselves are so tender and beautifully observed that you won’t really mind.

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