Catland: Feline Enchantment and the Making of the Modern World

Catland: Feline Enchantment and the Making of the Modern World

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A Times and Sunday Times Book of the Year. A Wall Street Journal Book of the Year. A Spectator Book of the Year. A Times Literary Supplement Book of the Year. A New Yorker Book of the Year.

Some called it a craze. To others it was a cult.

Join prize-winning historian Kathryn Hughes to discover how Britain fell in love with cats and ushered in a new era.

'He invented a whole cat world' declared H. G. Wells of Louis Wain, the Edwardian artist whose anthropomorphic kittens made him a household name.

His drawings were irresistible but Catland was more than the creation of one eccentric imagination. It was an attitude - a way of being in society while discreetly refusing to follow its rules. As cat capitalism boomed in the spectacular Edwardian age, prized animals changed hands for hundreds of pounds and a new industry sprung up to cater for their every need.

Cats were no longer basement-dwelling pest-controllers, but stylish cultural subversives, more likely to flaunt a magnificent ruff and a pedigree from Persia. Wherever you found old conventions breaking down, there was a cat at the centre of the storm. Whether they were flying aeroplanes, sipping champagne or arguing about politics, Wain's feline cast offered a sly take on the restless and risky culture of the post-Victorian world.

No-one experienced these uncertainties more acutely than Wain himself, confined to a mental asylum while creating his most iconic work.

Catland is a fascinating and fabulous unravelling of our obsession with cats, and the man dedicated to chronicling them. 

Kathryn Hughes is the author of The Victorian Governess, The Short Life and Long Times of Mrs Beeton and the hugely acclaimed George Eliot: The Last Victorian. Educated at Oxford University, she holds a PhD in Victorian studies. She is a visiting lecturer at several British universities and reviews regularly for the Daily Telegraph and the Literary Review.

Paperback, 416 pages

H: 198mm W: 129mm Spine: 35mm

Weight: 380 grams