Edmonton Journal

Cats do the work they want, book shows

-

LOS ANGELES Dogs work. Cats sleep, purr and preen. At least that is what dog people would have you believe. Author Lisa Rogak set out to discover what cats really spend their time doing. The result is her book called Cats on the Job.

She found that dogs do what you want, but cats do what they want. Dogs will follow your job descriptio­n, cats create their own. That’s why so many cat jobs are one-of-akind. Basically, with dogs, you get the help you wanted. With cats, you get help you didn’t know you wanted.

After all, a lot of people swear the Internet was saved when memes came along, celebratin­g cats for being catlike — Grumpy Cat’s frown (8.1 million Facebook followers) or Nora’s piano-playing prowess.

Welcome cats greet you if they are in the mood, she said. “That’s why some people are afraid of cats. They don’t suck up to people like a lot of dogs will do.”

Rogak’s first chapter tells the story of Sable, a crossing-guard cat from Washington. Sable showed up one day in 2011, watched crossing guard Monti Franckowia­k for a while, then what Franckowia­k did on one side of the street, Sable did on the other.

Sable was there twice a day, every day. The school presented him with an official orange safety vest. If it was snowing, the cat would watch from the top of a snowpile. And if a student should fall, he would be right there to lick away the tears, Franckowia­k said.

Rogak said she laughed all the way through her research. “It was very therapeuti­c.”

She even went to a book signing with one of the cats she profiled, Boswell the Fifth, who lives in Boswell’s Books in Shelburne Falls, Mass. (She’s the fifth cat named Boswell to hold court at the store over the years.)

But when it came to signing books, Boswell wanted none of it. So the store got a signature stamp in her name while she curled up in the front window or recycle bin.

When Rogak visited Rusty, CEO of Rusty’s Heirloom Tomatoes, in Dunbarton, N.H., she met owner Ken Cook and got a tour from Rusty. Then Rusty bowed out for a cat nap.

In her introducti­on, Rogak says a lot of cat-lovers believe the best job for a cat is CMO — Chief Mousing Officer.

Mousing was Carlow’s first job when the tabby with an orange moustache first took up residence at a New York firehouse. Firefighte­rs on Engine 22, Ladder 13, were on a call in the spring of 2011 when they found the kitten in a car tire, said Jessica Mikel-Bertolini, whose husband, Thomas Bertolini, is one of the cat’s buddies at the station on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.

They took him to the firehouse, named him for a nearby bar and put him to work. At first they found a lot of dead mice. Now the mice are long gone and Carlow’s got a new job as an up-and-comer on Instagram: Carlow FDNY Cat, with more than 25,000 followers.

Rogak’s next book is about Jan Louch and the cats she cared for at the library where she works. Rogak met them while researchin­g Cats on the Job, but they were so special, they deserved their own book. It’s due out next spring: The True Tails of Baker and Taylor: The Library Cats Who Left Their Pawprints on a Small Town ... and the World.

 ?? JESSICA MIKEL BERTOLINI ?? Carlow, the mascot of a fire station in Manhattan, has more than 25,000 Instagram followers.
JESSICA MIKEL BERTOLINI Carlow, the mascot of a fire station in Manhattan, has more than 25,000 Instagram followers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada