FICTION

The Cat's Table

Knopf. Oct. 2011. 256p. ISBN 9780307700117. $26; eISBN 9780307700452. CD: Random Audio. FICTION
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OrangeReviewStarOne of the first books I reviewed at LJ was Ondaatje's In the Skin of a Lion, and I have loved him for his luscious language and penetrating insights ever since. So I'm thrilled he has a new novel forthcoming. His hero, an 11-year-old bound for England aboard a ship chugging through the Indian Ocean, finds himself seated during dinner at the unpropitious "cat's table." His tablemates include two other boys, with whom he has some wild adventures, and some outré adults who talk to him of literature, jazz, and women. More than shipboard entertainment, this novel promises to plumb our first painful steps toward growing up. With an 11-city tour, a 100,000-first printing, and a reading group guide
"The journey was to be an innocent story within the small parameter of my youth," says the narrator of his voyage aboard the Oronsay, which carried him through the Indian Ocean to England and his divorced mother. But for 11-year-old Michael, things shift from the moment he is seated at "the cat's table," the least propitious spot in the dining room. Michael enjoys wild escapades with the two other boys at the table, quiet Ramadhin and hell-raiser Cassius, while befriending the mismatched adults at his table as well as his card-playing roommate, who tends the ship's kennels. Others on board include Michael's older cousin Emily, who takes up with the magnetic head of a performing troupe while protecting a deaf and frail-looking girl named Asuntha, and a heavily chained prisoner. The relationship among these four characters precipitates crisis, but we're not led to it systematically; instead, Booker Prize winner Ondaatje (Anil's Ghost) flashes forward to Michael as an adult, showing us how unwittingly we lose our childhood innocence and how that loss comes to affect us much, much later.
VERDICT Writing in a less lyrically wrought style than usual, Ondaatje turns in a quietly enthralling work. Highly recommended. [See Prepub Alert, 4/4/11.]—Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal
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