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What do our pets do when they're not with us? Caroline Paul and Wendy MacNaughton used GPS, cat cameras, psychics, and the web to track the adventures of their beloved cat Tibia.
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The review is available at The Gray Planet.
Lost Cat: A True Story of Love, Desperation, and GPS Technology, by Caroline Paul, illustrated by Wendy MacNaughton, is a short, kind of cute, illustrated book about Caroline Paul's cats, Tibula and Fibula. The cats are litter mates, but very different. Paul is injured when she crash lands an experimental plane, and she endures a long convalescence in her home, cared for by Wendy MacNaughton. While Paul is convalescing, Fibby disappears for a few weeks and then returns unharmed. Depressed and physically limited by her injuries, Paul becomes obsessed with discovering where Fibby had spent his time and why.
Paul's obsession results in consulting psychics, pet detectives, and using GPS receivers and cameras attached to Fibby's collar, in an attempt to find where and with whom Fibby spent the missing time. It's all kind of cute and Paul does try to put some meat into the story by associating her obsession with Fibby's escapades with the depression that accompanies her convalescence and by showing us that the resolution of these problems requires engagement with her neighbors—actually talking to people and being nice. But although it rings true, I just didn't care much. I only finished the book because it was so short and the pages flew by filled with MacNaughton's nice illustrations.
Forty years ago, when I had my own tomcat who disappeared for days at a time, I might have cared a little more, but now, not so much.