![]() Also, "chi" apparently sounds like the Japanese word for pee, which is funny because when they're trying to box-train her, they keep yelling "pee" at her while taking her bag to her box after every pee incident, to the point where she thinks it's her name. They are not allowed to have pets in their apartment but nobody wants to adopt Chi, so they kind of end up stuck with her. Spoiled? I think so.Īnyway, Chi is distraught when she's separated from her mama cat and embarks on a series of misadventures that culminate in her winding up with a family that consists of a mom, dad, and toddler. Now she's a lazy fatty who- I kid you not- has her very own chair, and a toybox where she keeps enough toys for like five cats. She came to our house starving and shivering, and you could see all her little kitten bones through her fur. I actually have a cat that we rescued as a kitten. A book about a family that adopts a lost kitten? Be still, my heart. ![]() I found a full-color version of Chi's Sweet Home in a Little Free Library and it was honestly just the thing I needed after a slew of books about dark shit and murder-joy. ![]()
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