Exquisite A lyrical double biography of man and cat and a wider philosophical inquiry... A beautiful book, one of the finest meditations on animal companionship that I have ever read -- Kathryn Hughes * Guardian * Superb. Carr, one of the most clear-sighted and relentlessly honest observers of the age, turns his terrifying attention to the mysterious, agonising and redemptive business of love. Its not just a book about a cat. Carr spares neither himself nor his readers. This is the real thing... Youll never be the same again -- Charles Foster, author of CRY OF THE WILD A moving account a warm, heavy love letter to Masha and her feline predecessors Carr knows he must not over-identify with Masha yet the parallels are there and poignantly told -- Francesca Angelini * Sunday Times * Devastating and beautiful, by turns a fascinating book of animal psychology and a personal memoir of unrelenting trauma, it dares us to take a journey into love and pain. . . This is a tale of time and mortality and the link we share with the constant flux of the natural world. . . Written in poetic, mournful, and delicate prose, My Beloved Monster is a love story and a requiem * The Wall Street Journal * Carr wasnt in need of redeeming in his final years, but My Beloved Monster is nonetheless an act of redemption. It gives specific life, and teeth and claws, to that old cliché about how we dont rescue animals; they rescue us * Los Angeles Times * The most brilliant feline portrait in literary history * People Magazine * Excellent. . . Worth the emotional investment, and the tissues you will need by the end, to spend time with a writer and cat duo as extraordinary as Masha and Carr * Washington Post Book World * A loving and lovely, lay-it-all-on-the-line explication of one mans fierce attachment * The New York Times * Carr writes about cats with a tender vividness that might make you see your own pets through new eyes * Los Angeles Times * A profound story of mortality, grief and love... My Beloved Monster will be compared with JR Ackerleys classic My Dog Tulip (1956), but to my mind Carr tells a more extraordinary tale -- John Gray * New Statesman *