Monday, May 23, 2011

The Rabbi's Cat

There are thousands of words that come to mind when reading this book.  Just after the first seven pages my immediate thought was, "This book is the weirdest book I have ever read!"  The Rabbi's Cat by Joann Sfar is a remarkable graphic novel that is packed with so many words, panels and more color than you know what to do with.  This book is considered an easy read, until you try to understand the reason for every meaning of every detail in every panel, quote, color or character detail.  That's when you become so overwhelmed you have to read it multiple times paying attention to one detail at a time until you become accustomed to reading this abnormal novel.

This story is directed toward the fantasizer and the heavy thinker.  Zlabya's character is certainly directed toward the "grass is always green on the other side" believers.  The no named cat relates to the the mischievous and slightly unpredictable readers.  Zlabya's character is probably the most predictable and common character that we can relate with many other stories we have read not only in class, but also your typical romance novels where the woman is completely content with who she is and what she knows but then this charming dapper fellow comes into her life and gives her an experience she has never had then suddenly she wants to be part of his world and blah blah blah we all know what happens after that.  Completely prophesied fairy tale we all know and want to hate but can't help but to love.  Zlabya just floats through life doing what she is accustomed to do and doesn't seek opportunity until it is handed to her.  Note that many people try to succeed through life this way, they always want what they can't have but also they don't realize they want something until it is present to them and some tend to think it will just happen for the sake that they want it.  Wrong, the grass is not always greener on the other side, but sometimes it takes falling on your face on the "greener" side to realize that.

The cat, however, is almost the complete opposite personality wise that is his character still has just as much predictability as Zlabya.  The cat has many personality revelations throughout the book.  He definitely starts off selfish and arrogant because he knows more than his mistress but gets to keep her all to himself.  When the cat is able to talk he questions others intelligence in comparison to his own and seems to mock and criticize is doing so.  As the book goes on the cat becomes more selfless when he sacrifices his ability to speak so the Rabbi will pass his dictation.  But then he gets all selfish again when Zlabya gets married.  I know what your thinking, "how on earth is this predictable?"  Well that's simple, you know how in every really bad teen movie there's always the one mean girl(s)/guy(s) who decide being mean is not all it's cracked up to be?  That's the cat!  Stay with me on this one.  The cat starts off on top of the world, he's better than anyone.  Then Jules takes his mistress away and he's not too happy about that so he begins to hate him for it.  Then he realizes everything is okay with this change and moves on with his life.

I personally loved this book.  The storyline was interesting and predictable but by reading into the detail you realize why it was done the way it was.  There is so much to get out of this book that I'm sure even after reading it for the hundredth time you'd find a new discovery about a certain detail you didn't think of before.  I will forever be a Disney girl and whenever I come across something that has a remote possibility of relating it to a fairy tale...especially one where everyone live happily ever after...I'm almost guaranteed to love it.

1 comment:

  1. I hadn't really thought of Sfar and Disney in the same thought, but when you present Zlabaya as a Sleeping Beauty type character, I guess you could do that. However, in Disney, you don't get to see Sleeping Beauty get annoyed at the new complications of her life, and we do get to see how Zlabaya has to deal with the fact that her new life is not quite as she had imagined it. However, I do not think The Cat would be allowed into the Disney canon.

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