I read this book before, many years ago when I received it as a gift. It was published in 1989. I found it while cleaning out a bookshelf and deciding what to keep and what to donate. This is only my second reading of the entire thing, though I have browsed through it at least once or twice since then. It's a collection of classic short stories and excerpts of longer stories, all of them involving cats. The artwork is a collection of contemporary photographs by Robin Upward, beautifully composed and lighted, of gorgeous cats, and those steal most of the attraction of this book, for me. I enjoy some of the stories, others not so much. There's an excerpt from Alice in Wonderland about the Cheshire Cat, which I enjoy a lot, as I did Charles Perrault's classic fairy story, "Puss in Boots." Two stories, "The Long-Cat" by Colette and "Little White King" by Marguerite Steen, stand out in my memory as favorites. Some of the others, not so much, though they are in a sense time capsules of short fiction and the treatment of cats in fiction by well-known authors, such as Chekhov and Twain, both of whose stories I found a bit disturbing as a cat lover, as I also did the "Tobermory" story by Saki. People can be such bastards to animals, and they were worse back then. There is even a disturbing indirect hint in the Colette story that reminded me of past practices of drowning unwanted kittens. So I'm not sure to recommend this for cat lovers, though cat lovers are likely the only ones who would be interested in it. If you pick it up, do so at your own risk, and for the love of the photos. I will be keeping this, not donating it, mainly for a few of the stories and my love of all the photos. It's a nice, compact example of what we used to call "coffee table" books.