Mary Gaitskill

Lost Cat

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‘Gaitskill writes with such authority, such radar-perfect detail.’ — New York Times

‘Last year I lost my cat Gattino. He was very young, at seven months barely an adolescent. He is probably dead but I don’t know for certain.’

So begins Mary Gaitskill’s stunning book-length essay, the closest thing she has written to a memoir. Lost Cat begins with the story of how Gaitskill rescued a stray cat in Italy and brought him to live with her in the US, where he went missing.

As she explores the unexpected trauma of her loss, Gaitskill describes how she came to foster two siblings, Caesar and Natalia, two inner-city children who spent summers and holidays with Gaitskill and her husband. The joys and ultimate difficulties of this relationship lead to a searing examination of loss, love, safety and fear, and how our limited understandings brush against our unlimited hopes. Gaitskill applies her razor-sharp writing to her most personal subjects yet.

‘Stubbornly original, with a sort of rhythm and fine moments that flatten you out when you don’t expect it.’ — Alice Munro
This book is currently unavailable
60 printed pages
Copyright owner
Bookwire
Original publication
2020
Publication year
2020
Publisher
Daunt Books
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Impressions

  • Yaz Arreolashared an impression8 days ago
    👍Worth reading
    🙈Lost On Me

  • Fabiola Segura Garciashared an impression2 months ago
    👍Worth reading
    💧Soppy

Quotes

  • Yaz Arreolahas quoted8 days ago
    HOW STUPID TO THINK I could break this pattern when I could not break my own. I can’t say offhand how many times, during the decades before I got married, I asked for or demanded some sort of relationship with someone who shut the door in my face, then opened it again and peeked out. I would – metaphorically – pound on the door and follow the person through endless rooms. Sometimes the door opened and I fell in love – before losing interest completely. I thought then that my feelings were false and had been all along, but the pain that came from rejecting someone or being rejected was real and deep. It did not help when I realised that I was as much to blame for the result as the people I pursued, that I often ‘played the loser’ so aggressively that I scarcely gave the person opposite me much choice in their response.
  • Yaz Arreolahas quoted8 days ago
    Love as a cheap stuffed toy bounced off your head – it’s a brilliant metaphor and a true one. But the metaphor for love that I feel more deeply is a lost, hungry little animal dying as it tries to find its way back home in the cold. It isn’t truer. But I feel it more.
  • Yaz Arreolahas quoted13 days ago
    Human love is grossly flawed, and even when it isn’t, people routinely misunderstand it, reject it, use it or manipulate it. It is hard to protect a person you love from pain, because people often choose pain; I am a person who often chooses pain.

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