(4/24/2018)
The first word that came to mind as I began reading this novel was "pleasant." It seemed like a rather simple story, with the only confusion on my part being the very emotional reactions the main characters had to cats. I am a cat lover and have had pet cats most of my life, but I was puzzled by the almost mystical feelings of the cat lovers in the story. Then I googled "Cats in Japanese culture" and learned that cats have a very significant role in Japanese culture. As I continued to read the book, it appeared that owning a cat was considered a great privilege and that the cat should be treated like an honored guest.
Once I got past my cultural confusion, I enjoyed the book, especially as the plot got a little more interesting with some foreshadowing of problems to come. Satoru decided to give his beloved cat Nana away and traveled to his friends' homes to see if anyone could keep the cat. The depiction of the strong bonds of friendship between Satoru and his friends from elementary, middle, and high school was lovely. While some of the story is told from the cat's point of view, other passages about past events do not seem to be related by the cat.
Each of Satoru's friends had some regrets about their past actions, and at one point his friend Sugi asked him, "How can you be such a good person when you've been so unlucky?" Later Satoru's aunt Noriko, who had raised him after his parents died, expressed her regrets to him for mistakes she had made, but he kept telling her how happy he had been with his life. His optimistic spirit and satisfaction with life seemed to be based in part on his love for his two cats, one from his boyhood, and Nana, his pet in his adult life.
Nana, the stray cat, became so close to Satoru that he remarked, "I am Satoru's one and only cat. And Satoru is my one and only pal." And later, "As we count up the memories from one journey, we head off on another."