Mar 28 2009
“Dewey: The Small-Town Library Cat Who Touched the World” by Vicki Myron
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The combination of working at a library plus reviewing nonfiction books in my spare time meant only one thing - Dewey: The Small-Town Library Cat Who Touched the World by Vicki Myron was a must read for me.
It is about Dewey, a stray cat found in the return bin at the library one morning after a terribly cold night in Spencer, Iowa. Someone had dropped the cat down the return bin shoot, and the library director, Vicki Myron, found him in there, clinging to life.
The Spencer Public Library adopted the cat and made him their own. In this autobiography, Myron chronicles not only Dewey’s life but her own, and also the background and history of Iowa, family farms, and libraries. She discusses going to school to get her masters in library science, Carnegie libraries, and remodeling libraries, all items that were especially interesting to me as a librarian.
But much more than that, it was a touching memoir of what it means to love a cat wholeheartedly, not only in good times (Dewey brought a lot of fame and attention to this small corner of the world) but in bad - when Dewey started to age and his coat wasn’t as shiny and youthful as it was before. (Yes, believe it or not, the library board actually discussed what to do with Dewey “now that he was old” and didn’t look as good. Apparently, we Americans are not only obsessed with human youthfulness but cat youthfulness too.)
If you love cats, libraries, or the small town life, then you’ll adore Dewey. There are pictures of Dewey throughout the book but all of them are printed in black and white, which for an orange tabby means you lose something in the process. But the Spencer Public Library has put together a web page dedicated to only pictures of Dewey with great captions underneath. After finishing the book, I enjoyed looking through all of the pictures.
Dewey: The Small-Town Library Cat touched my heart - it made me think, it made me grateful, and it made me cry.
4.5 out of 5 stars.
Havs
Oh yeah, my mom read that book–I didn’t actually read it, but I ended up flipping through enough of it that I feel like I did. Dewey was seriously adorable.
And now I feel dumb for not using the product affiliate link things in my book reviews. I should go fix that.
100 indecisions, Dewey was adorable, was he not? He seemed like the perfect cat.
And definitely use Today’s aff link when writing up book reviews. You don’t get paid anything extra if someone buy something through your site, but Today does take the use of aff links into account when deciding how much to pay you per post. Do you already have an aff link for Amazon through Today? If not, you may not be able to get one for a while because they’ve put a hold on adding new accounts into the system.
Callista, when you have a chance, definitely read it. There’s a little more personal history in there (history of the author) than I really cared about, so I just skipped those paragraphs, but it wasn’t often enough to cause me to dislike the book. That is, however, the reason why it got 4.5 instead of 4.75 stars.
When you write up the review for it, be sure to tell me - I’d like to hear your thoughts on it.
Havs
Dewey is sooooo adorable! I wish I could have seen him!
I’m not a small town girl, but I always respect businesses that have resident cats. It just adds something for me. Our local half-price books have a couple of store cats.