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Cat Women

August 20, 2024
by the gentle author

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Since there are rumblings against cat women on the other side of the Atlantic, I thought this was a good time to publish this fine collection of portraits of females and their felines assembled by Alice Maddicott  author of CAT WOMEN : An Exploration of Feline Friendships and Lingering Superstitions.

“I became a cat woman the moment I was hit with a thud of love that I’d never realised a creature could produce,” Alice admitted to me. “I never thought I’d become a cat lady but, as I think of it now, the strangest thing is that it is something you can become.”

“It is easy to miss the second cat, he disappears into the white of her floral dress, next to the tabby stripes of his friend.”

“Girl and cat are all the life of this photograph – her happiness so bright.”

“A mother sits, her daughter stands, made one by the curve of her arms. The cat has been grabbed to make a triptych – their little family – a tumble of curves.”

“Look at me and Mary, he says, we are one and you can never tear us apart.”

“Rosalind lifts Marmalade out of the pram – her precious patient.”

“There are some pains only cats can make better.”

“The invisible ribbons that bind her and Sadie are stronger than any threat. She will not leave her.”

“He’s wrapped in arms, she frames him, a tender representation of perfect teenage dreaminess, when the world was vast and full and for the taking.”

“The kitten she holds is Gretel, her brother Hansel is elsewhere, a black blur battling the wire fence.”

“This is not their first Christmas together and each year they pose together by the sparkling tree.”

“On her dress near her shoulder, that could be a tear from naughty claws and teeth.”

“She is smiling but it is the love for her cat that stands out. She cuddles him properly.”

“He’s going doolally, blissed out as she holds him so protectively.”

“Cradling the loose end of a washing line, she rests. A well-earned sit on the steps and a bowl of food for the cat.”

“Her neatly parted hair, clips in place, hides her true wildness, how much she and Moppet share and the joy of freedom waiting for them.”

“She doesn’t look mean, more frustrated and worn out, the feeling any parent of toddlers would understand.”

“This cat is somewhat grander and gazes more at ease than her owner, who is strangely still, arms obscured, buckled feet neatly turned out.”

“Her garden is beautiful and full of sun. Her cat is white and all candyfloss despite the strange grip she has on her.”

“She could have forgotten the strength of the bond she had with her cat then suddenly be flooded with the memory, months or years later.

Photographs and text copyright © Alice Maddicott

Click here to order a copy of CAT WOMEN : An Exploration of Feline Friendships and Lingering Superstitions by Alice Maddicott from the publisher, September Books

You may also like to read about

The Life & Times of Mr Pussy

The Cat Lady of Spitalfields

The Cats of Spitalfields

9 Responses leave one →
  1. Andy permalink
    August 20, 2024

    The cats I knew and shared had memories twinned with mine .

  2. Jill Wilson permalink
    August 20, 2024

    As a bonefide cat woman myself I can absolutely relate to these delightful pictures of the very special bond between us and our feline friends.
    I have recently been away for a week and so I am still in the welcome home stage where my cat is needing lots more attention than normal. Bliss! 🐈‍⬛

  3. August 20, 2024

    Great pictures. Thank you. How is Schrödinger?

  4. Christine permalink
    August 20, 2024

    Im not a cat person but lovely photos! I also never associate pets with Victorians as so few photos x

  5. Virginia Heaven permalink
    August 20, 2024

    A lovely calming interlude.

  6. Leslie Eaton permalink
    August 20, 2024

    These pictures put a tug on my heart. I’ve had seven cats in my life. I never know what little thing will suddenly remind me of one or the other of them, their personalities, and the bond we had.

  7. Carol Himmelman-Christopher permalink
    August 20, 2024

    What a wonderful collection of photos. As I grew up in Los Angeles my family had a succession of cats – most loving and cuddly, only one totally stand-offish (to put it mildly). While I personally haven’t owned one since hitting adulthood – I appreciate how wonderful and mysterious they are. Thank you for sharing these. And as an American ex-pat happy in Germany (and an original and still proud 1970s bra-burning liberal feminist), I condemn the loathsome remarks of everyone in the moronic cult infecting the political ‘drama’ on that side of the Pond.

  8. August 21, 2024

    Cats are incredible creatures, truly. I photographed my neighbour’s cat CHICO back then, but still haven’t developed the film. My goodness. — But in the meantime, I can recommend this reddish-coloured specimen that I came across in the city:
    https://www.fotocommunity.de/photo/wer-nimmt-mich-mit-23092021-achim-schmidtke/45624486

    Love & Peace
    ACHIM

  9. October 29, 2024

    Though I am not a fan of cats, I must say that these photographs are very stunning! There are so few images of Victorian-era pets that I seldom think about them

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