#the cat who saved books
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
who-do-i-know-this-man · 1 month ago
Text
⚠️Vote for whomever YOU DO NOT KNOW⚠️‼️
Tumblr media Tumblr media
54 notes · View notes
galina · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
I wasn't sure how I felt about this one overall, but I laughed a lot at this little bit of The Cat Who Saved Books – it's giving the energy of those book bloggers who read more books than seems humanly possible. Nothing but love to all my quick readers out there 🤍
231 notes · View notes
samireads · 9 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Japanese books with cats on the cover 🐈
82 notes · View notes
fght-ff-yr-dmns · 3 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Currently Reading
The Cat Who Saved Books
By Sosuke Natsukawa
I've picked up this little book before moving on to my Halloween pick of The Shining.
It's a unique read and incredibly charming. I've only had it since yesterday and I'm already half way through.
18 notes · View notes
mbbookblr · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
"A book that sits on a shelf is nothing but a bundle of paper... But a book that has been cherished and loved, filled with human thoughts, has been endowed with a soul."
84 notes · View notes
ramyaknox · 7 months ago
Text
So I made a thing...
This is an "edit" for want of a better word of books that I feel are important to me. Some of them are things I read as a child that are no longer my favourites but they sparked a game or an idea that I really remember, some of them are books I've re read so many times, some of them are my favourites, many of them made me cry. Of course there are more books I could've considered but these ones felt right. This was actually so fun to do because I got to remember all of the stories I love and then take snazzy pictures in a pile of books.
If you spot your favourite book reblog and put it in the tags! I'd love to see some other people make these too if you think it looks fun.
All the books in the video are in the tags
10 notes · View notes
mydailybookquotes · 2 years ago
Text
“A book that sits on a shelf is nothing but a bundle of paper. Unless it is opened, a book possessing great power or an epic story is mere scraps of paper. But a book that has been cherished and loved, filled with human thoughts, has been endowed with a soul.”
-Sosuke Natsukawa, The Cat Who Saved Books
73 notes · View notes
gareteddybear · 3 months ago
Text
Thanks, The Cat Who Saved Books for introducing me to "Run, Melos!"
3 notes · View notes
haveyoureadthisscifibook2 · 2 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
vote yes if you have finished the entire book. vote no if you have not finished the entire book.
(faq · submit a book)
3 notes · View notes
reading-cat · 2 months ago
Text
The Cat Who Saved Books
I too need a cat to help me fight consumerism and self esteem issues.
2 notes · View notes
tinynavajoreads · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
Seven Covers in Seven Days: The Cat Who Saved Books by Sosuke Natsukawa
Tagged by: @bigcats-birds-and-books
Every day post the cover of a book you love and tag someone else to do the same!
Tagging: @beardedbookdragon
39 notes · View notes
magicalyaku · 2 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Why is it October already and why am I still talking about books I read in April?! I'm like half a year behind in time than the rest of the universe. So let's make this quick, eh? The theme of this part is Gay Adult Fiction series, my comfort food. uAu
The Prince's Assassin series (Ariana Nash): I picked this up on a whim, at the end of April when I was in a slump, and then I read all 3 books and the novella in about a week. It's good! In the beginning, it has quite a few parallels to Captive Prince but I didn't mind and it quickly becomes its own story. There's magic and elves (who are very different from what you usually imagine as 'elves') and some dark themes. I liked reading it a lot and I enjoyed Nico as a character. That he actually walked away from Vasili when it got too much. And that just when I thought "how often will you repeat this?" they worked it out. :D
The Paladin's Shadow & The Sword-Witch's Heart (Radiance 2+3) (Tavia Lark): The easy-going ones, here they are! Not much different to say from the other books I read by this author. Enjoyable adventure, romance that works, good world-building. For the third book, I was very apprehensive to read about the second protagonist because I didn't like him when he appeared in the second book. But suprisingly, he got better and I ended up liking book 3 a lot more than book 2. The series got new covers recently btw. These look a lot better than the old ones. :'D
The Secret Lives of Country Gentlemen & The Nobleman's Guide to Seducing a Scoundrel (The Doomsday Books 1+2) (KJ Charles): Omg, so much fun. I loved reading the first book, so 4 days waiting for the second volume to be delivered was testing my patience really hard. yAy It's fun and at times suprisingly dark (as in people die) and I really like the portrayal of the marsh, as a place, as a home. That was the one piece I missed a little in the second book, but otherwise I liked that one just as much. Can't go wrong with KJ Charles. :)
Running Close to the Wind (Alexandra Rowland): As it turns out, we started with the darkest and end with the funniest book. :'D This one is not exactly a series, but set in the same world and slightly connected to the events of the author's previous novel A Taste of Gold and Iron. This one took me by surprise. It's hugely different than its predecessor but so much fun! It's a comedy, really, and a smart one at that, despite it consisting 70% of dirty jokes. (There are no explicit scenes, though!) I enjoyed reading every second of it. It's just great. Good characters, smart writing and dialogue, adventure, absurdity. Highly recommended.
There's still 4 more books on my list but I just decided that I don't to need to talk about them much, so have one (or three) sentence(s) for each and then be done with it:
Snow Boys (Simon Doyle): Cute, contemporary story with coming out drama and family drama. Why does it change covers so often?
A Spark of Magic (Tari Riley): Self-published fantasy story with a budding romance between a teen witch and an accidental merboy, first book of a series, was pretty okay. The only thing that irked me was how they were constantly grabbing things (instead of taking them or picking them up or fetching them ...). :'D
Only Mostly Devastated prequel novella (Sophie Gonzales): Of course, I've already forgotten everything about the main story except the main points and that I enjoyed it, yet it was easy enough to get into the prequel.
The Cat Who Saved Books (Sosuke Natsukawa): I didn't like it, because it's not about the cat but the usual Japanese teenage manga protagonist, but because it's a novel instead of a manga suddenly it's great and serious? My ass. It makes some good points about our modern reading habits but is very simplified, and if you let me talk any further, I will only rage about every single point that annoyed me, so I stop. :)
6 notes · View notes
prongsevermore · 1 year ago
Text
I finished reading the cat who saved books by sōsuke natsukawa, and let me tell you, it felt like a love letter to readers.
20 notes · View notes
modfic-heatherbee · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
-Sōsuke Natsukawa, The Cat Who Saved Books, page 185
7 notes · View notes
hoderoxi · 2 years ago
Text
‘Books are filled with human thoughts and feelings. People suffering, people who are sad or happy, laughing with joy. By reading their words and their stories, by experiencing them together, we learn about the hearts and minds of other people besides ourselves. Thanks to books, it’s possible to learn not only about the people around us every day, but people living in totally different worlds.’
'Empathy.... this is the power of books.'
- Sosuke Natsukawa || The Cat Who Saved Books
14 notes · View notes
library-child · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
What a deplorable life...
14 notes · View notes