A review by lalazu
A Cat, a Man, and Two Women by Jun'ichirō Tanizaki

3.0

I don't know what exactly I was expecting from Tanizaki but I guess this is what I got? No, I mean, from a Japanese studies kind of view this was certainly interesting. A cat as the projection of self and affection, that's interesting. The way everyone in this is hiding their true feelings and plotting, with the cat as the centerpiece. Wow.
But as a freetime reader... Hm. The end left me hanging or I would have given it a 4 because it made me think.