Roof Cats

Eukalypto


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REVIEWS
 
  
 

One of the most charming, nuanced, and emotionally real depictions I’ve seen between man and animal […]. The story dances between comedy and heartbreak [with] a natural rhythm that mirrors real life.

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A beautifully layered story that captures one year of life across three Beirut buildings. It’s not just about animals, but about the messy, shared lives of neighbors, choices, and compassion.

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What gripped me in Roof Cats was its honesty about both beauty and tragedy. The balance of humor and grief is striking. It’s a portrait of a Beirut block where joy, betrayal, and resilience play out side by side.

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Reading Roof Cats felt like watching a tapestry of Beirut’s rooftops come alive—not just with cats, but with messy, complicated, achingly human lives. This isn’t just a story about strays—it is about chosen family, about coexistence across species, and about the quiet, persistent bonds that form in overlooked corners of life. Sometimes, love shows up uninvited—and changes everything.

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Great book, full of funny situations and witty dialogue. It reads like a well-paced movie: scene after scene, with no internal monologues—just action and words. I also loved the subtlety of the descriptions.

 

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