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Read advance reader review of We'll Prescribe You a Cat by Syou Ishida, page 5 of 5

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We'll Prescribe You a Cat by Syou Ishida

We'll Prescribe You a Cat

by Syou Ishida

  • Published:
  • Sep 2024, 336 pages
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There are currently 32 member reviews
for We'll Prescribe You a Cat
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  • Molly A. (Pryor, OK)
    "We'll Prescribe You A Cat" is a Purrfect Solution
    Whoever thought that cats were the answer to life's problems? In "We'll Prescribe You A Cat," the reader sees that cats really are the solution to just about all problems.

    The story is told through vignettes of various "patients" who come to an obscure, word-of-mouth "clinic" where psychological problems are presumably resolved. The clinic has a single doctor and nurse, both of which are eclectically wise and oddly disavowing at the same time. For each person seeking their help, the prescription is the same: a "dose" of a cat, complete with its life essentials and instructions, to be "taken" at regular intervals for a certain time period. All of the patients become invariably attached to their "prescriptions," and the patients unwittingly are healed of their ailments.

    This book is not literary prose, and like most translated books, the wording is sometimes awkward and choppy. However, I found myself relating to the book (as a cat mom) and laughing out loud during the many jocular stories. It was feel-good fiction which was just what the doctor ordered.
  • Bb
    Can a cat prescription solve your problems?
    I was very pleased to receive an advanced reader’s copy of this book. I am a cat lover and thought this book would be the perfect fit for me. Unfortunately the execution of this really great concept didn’t work well for me. I enjoyed the beginning stories but then I found the rest of the book to be redundant and repetitive. I know others will likely really love this book and it would be worthy of some discussion with others.
  • MaryJane B. (Salisbury, VT)
    A cat is the solution for all your problems
    When five troubled Japanese citizens of varying ages seek help to cope with their unhappiness, they get their help from a psychiatrist/doctor/vet. This book is written with a fantasy solution to end every day troubles. How easy the solution is. Add a cat to your life and you'll discover a different perspective to your troubles. The cat which is prescribed helps the person to be less self absorbed. The cat is like a magical pair of glasses to view your life and your affect on others and change for the better.

    I found the repetition of each story formula ….have a personal problem….seek out a doctor…..meet with a wizard like man and his rude secretary…be prescribed a cat that comes with all the supplies in a cage…...confusion how to adjust to this strange cat….see your life from another perspective…and all is well. I could have stopped the book after the first character. The repetition of ideas was annoying.
  • Dawn Z. (Canton, MI)
    I love cats. I wanted to love this book.
    The concept of "We'll Prescribe You a Cat" by Syou Ishida is charming. Somewhere in Kyoto, there is a mysterious clinic in an alley that treats patients by letting them borrow a cat. The clinic is impossible for most people to find, and the door is difficult to open. The clinic staff members bear a striking resemblance to the staff at a nearby veterinary office.

    The novel consists of five chapters--almost short stories--that are connected via their relationship to the clinic. Each chapter is named for the cat or cats that are prescribed. But there is little connection between the chapters, and some mysteries are never explained. For example, why does the clinic exist? How did it come about? There are hints, but no resolution.

    As a cat lover, I was bothered by the descriptions of patients carrying cats around in carriers all day, or the cats sliding in carriers as they were moved. There was also talk of euthanizing one of the prescribed cats after it was returned, but fortunately, the patient adopted it.

    I wanted the story to have a more consistent storyline, even though I liked that the patients learned from the cats and their experiences positively impacted their lives.

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