Roger A. Caras
Author profile
born
May 28, 1928
in Methuen, MA, The United States
died
February 18, 2001
|
A Cat is Watching: A Look at the Way Cats See Us
— 7 editions |
|
|
Cats Of Thistle Hill: A Mostly Peaceable Kingdom
— published 1994 — 2 editions |
|
|
A Dog Is Listening: The Way Some of Our Closest Friends View Us
— published 1992 — 4 editions |
|
|
Monarch of Deadman Bay: The Life and Death of a Kodiak Bear
— 2 editions |
|
|
Roger Caras' Treasury of Great Horse Stories
— published 1990 — 3 editions |
|
|
Going for the Blue: Inside the World of Show Dogs and Dog Shows
— published 2001 — 5 editions |
|
|
The Custer Wolf: Biography of an American Renegade
— published 1990 — 2 editions |
|
|
Forest: A Dramatic Portrait of Life in the American Wild
— published 1979 — 3 editions |
|
|
A Perfect Harmony: The Intertwining Lives of Animals and Humans Throughout History
— published 1996 — 2 editions |
|
|
Harper Illustrated Handbook Of Dogs
— published 1985 — 2 editions |
“In Egypt: Under no conditions, under threat of death could anyone kill a cat. People were exceuted for even killing a cat accidentally. And when a cat died, the whole family, and probably their closest friends, went into mourning, the measure of their personal loss signalled by their shaving off their eyebrows.”
― Roger A. Caras, A Celebration Of Cats
― Roger A. Caras, A Celebration Of Cats
“Cats make one of the most satisfying sounds in the world: they purr. [...] Almost all cats make us feel good about ourselves because they let us know they feel good about us, about themselves, and about our relationship with them. A purring cat is a form of high praise, like a gold star on a test paper. It is a reinforcement of soemthing we would all like to believe about ourselves -- that we are nice.”
― Roger A. Caras, A Celebration Of Cats
― Roger A. Caras, A Celebration Of Cats
“A cat knows how to be comfortable, how to get the people around it to serve it. In a tranquil domestic situation, the cat is a veritable manipulative genius. It seeks the soft, it seeks the warm, it prefers the quiet and it loves to be full. It displays, when it gets its own way in these matters, a degree of contentment we would all like to emulate.”
― Roger A. Caras, A Celebration Of Cats
― Roger A. Caras, A Celebration Of Cats









