Varjak Paw [NOOK Book]

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Overview

Mesopotamian Blue cat, Varjak Paw, has never been Outside before; he and his family have always lived in the isolated house at the top of the hill. But Varjak is forced out into the city when the sinister Gentleman and his two menacing cats take over his home. With help from his mystical ancestor, Jalal, Varjak manages to overcome challenges such as self-survival and a threat from the gangland cats, and he ultimately discovers the terrifying secrets behind the Vanishings. But can he save his own family from their ...
See more details below

Overview

Mesopotamian Blue cat, Varjak Paw, has never been Outside before; he and his family have always lived in the isolated house at the top of the hill. But Varjak is forced out into the city when the sinister Gentleman and his two menacing cats take over his home. With help from his mystical ancestor, Jalal, Varjak manages to overcome challenges such as self-survival and a threat from the gangland cats, and he ultimately discovers the terrifying secrets behind the Vanishings. But can he save his own family from their fate?

With wonderful integrated illustrations from acclaimed comic book artist Dave McKean, this book will appeal to all ages.


From the Hardcover edition.

Guided by the spirit of his legendary Mesopotamian ancestor, Jalal, Varjak Paw, a pure-bred cat, leaves his home and pampered existence and sets out to save his family from the evil Gentleman who took away their owner, the Contessa.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly
"The author follows mythic archetypes in this densely plotted cat story, illustrated in chilling, sinuous pen-and-ink images by McKean," said PW's starred review. " Ages 8-12. (May) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
From The Critics
This book is written from the cat's point of view which creates an attention-grabbing story. Varjak's actions are the reasons we hear cats are given 9 lives and his adventures make him a tough, courageous, and believable character. As he grows from a kitten into a mature cat, Varjak must face adversity, cat gangs, dangerous dogs, and mysterious vanishings. He is able to survive these risks by using a type of martial arts developed especially for cats called the Way. A lot of Far East philosophy is incorporated into the story and the reader will come away with a better understanding of the beliefs of that part of the world. This is a truly an action-packed novel and exceptional illustrations add suspense and intrigue to the book. Middle-school students will thoroughly enjoy this story and the format is one that lends itself to high-interest, low-level reading. It is also good for ESL students. This is a debut novel and I have no doubt that there will be sequels for the reader to look forward to. All I can think of say to describe this book is "WOW!" 2003, Dell Yearling, Ages 10 to 14.
—Kathie M. Josephs

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780307548696
  • Publisher: Random House Children's Books
  • Publication date: 4/23/2009
  • Sold by: Random House
  • Format: eBook
  • Pages: 256
  • Sales rank: 190,533
  • File size: 8 MB
  • Items ship to U.S, APO/FPO and U.S. Protectorate addresses.

Meet the Author

SF Said is one of Britain’s best young writers.

Dave McKean, world-renowned graphic illustrator, illustrated Coraline by Neil Gaiman.


From the Hardcover edition.

Read an Excerpt

Varjak Paw Excerpt

Chapter One

The Elder Paw was telling a story.

It was a Jalal tale, one of the best. Varjak loved to hear his grandfather’s tales of their famous ancestor: how Jalal fought the fiercest warrior cats, how he was the mightiest hunter, how he came out of Mesopotamia and travelled to the ends of the earth, further than any cat had been before.

But today, the Elder Paw’s tale just made Varjak restless. So what if Jalal had such exciting adventures? Varjak never would. Jalal had ended his days in the Contessa’s house. His family of Mesopotamian Blues had stayed here ever since.

The old place must have been full of light and life in Jalal’s time, generations ago—but now it was full of dust and musty smells. The windows were always closed, the doors locked. There was a garden, but it was surrounded by a high stone wall. Jalal was the last to cross it. In all the years since then, no one had ever left the Contessa’s house.

Now, no one except Varjak was even listening to the tale of Jalal’s adventures. Father, Mother and Aunt Juni were dozing in the late afternoon light that trickled through the thick green windows. His big brother Julius was flexing his muscles; his cousin Jasmine was fiddling with her collar. His litter brothers Jay, Jethro and Jerome were playing one of those kittenish games that Varjak could never see the point of, and wasn’t allowed to join in anyway.

No one was looking at him. This was his chance. He’d been in the garden before, but the family didn’t like it out there, and never let him stay very long.

Stealthy as Jalal himself, Varjak rose up and padded to the cat door. He could see the garden on the other side. He could almost feel the fresh air, brushing through his whiskers. He nudged it open—

‘Variak Paw!’ It was Father. ‘Where do you think you’re going?’

Varjak spun around. The tale was over; they’d woken up and seen him. But this time, he wouldn’t give in.

‘Aren’t we allowed in the garden, now?’ he said.

‘Sweetheart,’ said Mother, coming over and straightening his collar, ‘the garden is a nasty, dirty place. You’re a pedigree cat. A pure-bred Mesopotamian Blue. What do you want out there?’

Varjak looked around: at the stuffy furniture, the locked-up cupboards, the curtains he wasn’t allowed to climb. He’d never been anywhere else, but this had to be the most boring place on earth.

‘Hunting,’ he said. ‘Aren’t we supposed to hunt? The tales talk about—’

‘Tales!’ snorted his big brother Julius, green eyes glinting. It was said that their ancestor Jalal had green eyes. Everyone in the family had them—everyone but Varjak Paw. ‘Tales are for kittens,’ scoffed Julius. Cousin Jasmine giggled; Varjak bristled.

‘Jalal was a long, long time ago,’ said Mother, smoothing and grooming Varjak’s silver-blue fur, until he wriggled away. ‘Anyway, Jalal came to live in the Contessa’s house for a good reason. The tales also say there are monsters Outside, huge monsters called dogs, so fierce that even people fear them.’ She shuddered. ‘No, we’re lucky that the Contessa loves us, and lets us live here.’

‘The Contessa loves some of us,’ interrupted Julius. Varjak knew what was coming; and worse, he thought it might be true. ‘When I was a kitten,’ boasted Julius, ‘the Contessa was down here every day. She used to let me play on her lap, she made a fuss of me. But now she only ever comes down to feed us, and sometimes she doesn’t even do that. In fact, we’ve hardly seen her at all—since that funny-looking Varjak was born.’

Cousin Jasmine giggled again. This time, Varjak’s litter brothers Jay, Jethro and Jerome joined in.

‘It’s because of his eyes,’ added Julius. ‘The colour of danger. A Mesopotamian Blue whose eyes aren’t green—it’s an embarrassment.’

That did it. Julius was bigger than him, and older, but Varjak couldn’t help it. He faced up to Julius, fur rising with anger.

‘I don’t believe you,’ he said. ‘You’re a liar.’

‘Varjak!’ said Father. ‘That’s no way to talk to your brother!’

‘But Julius said—’

‘Whine, whine, whine,’ sneered Julius. ‘Listen to the little insect whine.’

‘Julius, you shouldn’t tease him so much,’ said Father. ‘The Contessa’s upstairs because she’s ill, nothing more. But Varjak Paw—you have to learn to behave like a proper Mesopotamian Blue. We’re noble cats, special cats. We don’t run around calling each other liars. We don’t talk about disgusting things like hunting. And we don’t get our paws all muddy in the garden. That’s not what being a Blue is about. Do you understand?’

Varjak’s tail curled up. It was always like this. Julius could get away with anything; but everything Varjak did was wrong.

‘Your father’s talking to you,’ said Aunt Juni sternly. ‘Do you understand?’

He stared down at the cold stone floor, silent. There was nothing he could say.

‘Fine,’ said Father. ‘Suit yourself. But until you learn to act like a Blue, there’ll be no supper for you.’ He licked his chops. ‘Come on, everyone. Let’s eat.’

They all headed down the corridor to the kitchen, leaving Variak on his own in the hallway between the stairs and front door. Last to go was the Elder Paw, the head of the family.

‘Don’t worry, Varjak,’ he whispered, so no one else could hear. ‘I’ll tell you another Jalal tale tonight—one about his greatest battle.’ He winked, and then joined the rest of them.

It made things a little better. Even if the tales made Varjak restless, he loved them. They were the closest he’d ever get to adventure in this place. He looked at the old, wooden stairs, covered in dusty carpet. The cats weren’t allowed up there now the Contessa was ill. Her door was always shut.

The whole house was like that. No one came in and no one went out. Nothing new or exciting ever happened. It was the dullest life a cat could have.

creeaak

The front door swung open. A blast of wind swirled in, sweeping all the dust into the air. Varjak’s fur stood on end.

click CLACK

Two shiny black shoes. Each big as a cat. Coming through the door.

Heart racing, Varjak bent back his head, to follow the line above the shoes. Up a pair of legs, up some more, he saw huge white hands, huge enough to hold his whole body, strong enough to break his neck.

He had to crane back even further, till it hurt, to see the face. It was a man Varjak had never seen before. It was hard to make out the man’s eyes for the shadows of his brow, but his full pink lips glistened wetly in the half-light.

The lips creased and opened, and out came a voice that rumbled like thunder, far above Varjak’s head. The man strode into the hallway.

Varjak felt dizzy. He looked down. By the man’s shiny black shoes, there were two sleek black cats, stalking into the Contessa’s house. They were nothing like Mesopotamian Blues. They looked much larger and stronger, even than Father or Julius, and there was something frightening about the way they moved. As if they were two parts of one body, working together perfectly. Too perfect. Varjak glanced from one to the other, and couldn’t tell them apart.

They came right up to him, and looked down at him with identical eyes; eyes as smooth and black as their fur. He trembled.

‘Who are you?’ he said. There was no flicker of understanding in their eyes, no expression: nothing. They just pushed him aside as if he wasn’t even there, and took up positions, flanking the staircase.

And now other men came into the house. Their shiny black shoes clicked past Varjak, one by one by one. It was all he could see of them. Frozen to the spot, mind spinning, he watched these giants pass the black cats, climb the stairs—and enter the room where the Blues weren’t allowed to go.

From the Hardcover Library Binding edition.

First Chapter

Varjak Paw Excerpt

Chapter One


The Elder Paw was telling a story.

It was a Jalal tale, one of the best. Varjak loved to hear his grandfather's tales of their famous ancestor: how Jalal fought the fiercest warrior cats, how he was the mightiest hunter, how he came out of Mesopotamia and travelled to the ends of the earth, further than any cat had been before.

But today, the Elder Paw's tale just made Varjak restless. So what if Jalal had such exciting adventures? Varjak never would. Jalal had ended his days in the Contessa's house. His family of Mesopotamian Blues had stayed here ever since.

The old place must have been full of light and life in Jalal's time, generations ago—but now it was full of dust and musty smells. The windows were always closed, the doors locked. There was a garden, but it was surrounded by a high stone wall. Jalal was the last to cross it. In all the years since then, no one had ever left the Contessa's house.

Now, no one except Varjak was even listening to the tale of Jalal's adventures. Father, Mother and Aunt Juni were dozing in the late afternoon light that trickled through the thick green windows. His big brother Julius was flexing his muscles; his cousin Jasmine was fiddling with her collar. His litter brothers Jay, Jethro and Jerome were playing one of those kittenish games that Varjak could never see the point of, and wasn't allowed to join in anyway.

No one was looking at him. This was his chance. He'd been in the garden before, but the family didn't like it out there, and never let him stay very long.

Stealthy as Jalal himself, Varjak rose up and padded to the cat door. He could see thegarden on the other side. He could almost feel the fresh air, brushing through his whiskers. He nudged it open—

‘Variak Paw!' It was Father. ‘Where do you think you're going?'

Varjak spun around. The tale was over; they'd woken up and seen him. But this time, he wouldn't give in.

‘Aren't we allowed in the garden, now?' he said.

‘Sweetheart,' said Mother, coming over and straightening his collar, ‘the garden is a nasty, dirty place. You're a pedigree cat. A pure-bred Mesopotamian Blue. What do you want out there?'

Varjak looked around: at the stuffy furniture, the locked-up cupboards, the curtains he wasn't allowed to climb. He'd never been anywhere else, but this had to be the most boring place on earth.

‘Hunting,' he said. ‘Aren't we supposed to hunt? The tales talk about—'

‘Tales!' snorted his big brother Julius, green eyes glinting. It was said that their ancestor Jalal had green eyes. Everyone in the family had them—everyone but Varjak Paw. ‘Tales are for kittens,' scoffed Julius. Cousin Jasmine giggled; Varjak bristled.

‘Jalal was a long, long time ago,' said Mother, smoothing and grooming Varjak's silver-blue fur, until he wriggled away. ‘Anyway, Jalal came to live in the Contessa's house for a good reason. The tales also say there are monsters Outside, huge monsters called dogs, so fierce that even people fear them.' She shuddered. ‘No, we're lucky that the Contessa loves us, and lets us live here.'

‘The Contessa loves some of us,' interrupted Julius. Varjak knew what was coming; and worse, he thought it might be true. ‘When I was a kitten,' boasted Julius, ‘the Contessa was down here every day. She used to let me play on her lap, she made a fuss of me. But now she only ever comes down to feed us, and sometimes she doesn't even do that. In fact, we've hardly seen her at all—since that funny-looking Varjak was born.'

Cousin Jasmine giggled again. This time, Varjak's litter brothers Jay, Jethro and Jerome joined in.

‘It's because of his eyes,' added Julius. ‘The colour of danger. A Mesopotamian Blue whose eyes aren't green—it's an embarrassment.'

That did it. Julius was bigger than him, and older, but Varjak couldn't help it. He faced up to Julius, fur rising with anger.

‘I don't believe you,' he said. ‘You're a liar.'

‘Varjak!' said Father. ‘That's no way to talk to your brother!'

‘But Julius said—'

‘Whine, whine, whine,' sneered Julius. ‘Listen to the little insect whine.'

‘Julius, you shouldn't tease him so much,' said Father. ‘The Contessa's upstairs because she's ill, nothing more. But Varjak Paw—you have to learn to behave like a proper Mesopotamian Blue. We're noble cats, special cats. We don't run around calling each other liars. We don't talk about disgusting things like hunting. And we don't get our paws all muddy in the garden. That's not what being a Blue is about. Do you understand?'

Varjak's tail curled up. It was always like this. Julius could get away with anything; but everything Varjak did was wrong.

‘Your father's talking to you,' said Aunt Juni sternly. ‘Do you understand?'

He stared down at the cold stone floor, silent. There was nothing he could say.

‘Fine,' said Father. ‘Suit yourself. But until you learn to act like a Blue, there'll be no supper for you.' He licked his chops. ‘Come on, everyone. Let's eat.'

They all headed down the corridor to the kitchen, leaving Variak on his own in the hallway between the stairs and front door. Last to go was the Elder Paw, the head of the family.

‘Don't worry, Varjak,' he whispered, so no one else could hear. ‘I'll tell you another Jalal tale tonight—one about his greatest battle.' He winked, and then joined the rest of them.

It made things a little better. Even if the tales made Varjak restless, he loved them. They were the closest he'd ever get to adventure in this place. He looked at the old, wooden stairs, covered in dusty carpet. The cats weren't allowed up there now the Contessa was ill. Her door was always shut.

The whole house was like that. No one came in and no one went out. Nothing new or exciting ever happened. It was the dullest life a cat could have.

creeaak

The front door swung open. A blast of wind swirled in, sweeping all the dust into the air. Varjak's fur stood on end.

click CLACK

Two shiny black shoes. Each big as a cat. Coming through the door.

Heart racing, Varjak bent back his head, to follow the line above the shoes. Up a pair of legs, up some more, he saw huge white hands, huge enough to hold his whole body, strong enough to break his neck.

He had to crane back even further, till it hurt, to see the face. It was a man Varjak had never seen before. It was hard to make out the man's eyes for the shadows of his brow, but his full pink lips glistened wetly in the half-light.

The lips creased and opened, and out came a voice that rumbled like thunder, far above Varjak's head. The man strode into the hallway.

Varjak felt dizzy. He looked down. By the man's shiny black shoes, there were two sleek black cats, stalking into the Contessa's house. They were nothing like Mesopotamian Blues. They looked much larger and stronger, even than Father or Julius, and there was something frightening about the way they moved. As if they were two parts of one body, working together perfectly. Too perfect. Varjak glanced from one to the other, and couldn't tell them apart.

They came right up to him, and looked down at him with identical eyes; eyes as smooth and black as their fur. He trembled.

‘Who are you?' he said. There was no flicker of understanding in their eyes, no expression: nothing. They just pushed him aside as if he wasn't even there, and took up positions, flanking the staircase.

And now other men came into the house. Their shiny black shoes clicked past Varjak, one by one by one. It was all he could see of them. Frozen to the spot, mind spinning, he watched these giants pass the black cats, climb the stairs—and enter the room where the Blues weren't allowed to go.


From the Hardcover Library Binding edition.
Customer Reviews
Average Rating 4.5
( 34 )

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  • Anonymous

    Posted August 17, 2006

    Varjak Paw

    Varjak Paw was a thrilling book about faith in yourself and others this book is outstanding!!!:)He goes through many dangers and defeats them with faith and hope for himself and others. Afraid to return home without a dog and dissapoint his family and ancestors he fights and finds a dog and saves his family as well as many other cats lives with his friends Holly and Tam by his side.

    2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted August 8, 2011

    That review#13

    That is soooo stupid. Im in 9 grade and i loved it. You are trying to be"grown up" soooooooo ......... shut up!

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted December 21, 2007

    Varjak Paw

    Have you ever seen a talking cat? This story is about a cat named Varjak. The book Varjak Paw is about a talking cat that saves his family from a bad man and two black cats. Varjak has to find a dog to scare away the man and the cats so he can save his family. Varjak will have to go in the city and find a dog. This is a great book. This book is one of the greatest books I have read! I can't wait to read the next one!

    1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted November 10, 2006

    Completely GRIPPING

    GREAT WONDERFULL AMAZING I COULDN'T STOP READING

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted August 21, 2005

    Fanominal

    I adored this book! At first I was like omg another fighting cat book, because I was hooked on the warriors series by Erin Hunter then by the 4th book i just lost interest. This kept me turning the pages! It is so unpredictable! Don't be fooled by the pictures and short pages. This was an easy read but a good one!

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted November 18, 2004

    awesome

    This book was the best book I ever read this month!! I did not want to put the book down!!Keep on writting books like this SF SAID!! ps:I will always read every book you come out with SF SAID and this book is great for animal lovers and people who like adveture books!!

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted July 1, 2004

    I absolutly loved it

    This book was fabulous!! I love cats and I love this book!! I would like another to come out!! This book is great for catlovers and catbooklovers. I had fun reading it and I hope you enjoy it as much as I did!!

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted February 15, 2004

    My kids are praying for a sequel!!!

    I read this book aloud to my two sons (8 and 11). We read all 255 pages in two sittings. The kids didn't want me to stop reading. We had it read in less than 24 hours. They were sucked into this story from the start. There is lots of action drama and humor in this book. They have been using lines from the story ever since and my sons can't wait to find out what will happen to Varjak and his new friends! Please keep writing SF Said! Both my sons agree this is one of the best books the three of us have read together. Great read aloud to your kids!

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted January 30, 2012

    Jag

    I try to be nice..

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted January 30, 2012

    Amari

    So ten?

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted January 15, 2012

    AWESOME!!!!!!

    This book was amazing. Who ever is reading this reveiw,u have to READ IT!!!!!!!!!

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted January 15, 2012

    Awesome

    This book is really awesome! If you enjoyed this book, then you might enjoy thw Warriors series. It is aboit cats, but it is a fantasy/adveture book as well as this book!

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Posted December 8, 2011

    ^_^

    Great story about a cat. I almost doesn't feel like you are reading about a cat.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted December 5, 2011

    Alex

    *carefully grabs Jackolyn and brings her to Breaking Dawn* Sam is there. Sam will help. Youll be fine.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted December 6, 2011

    Sophie

    ...

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  • Anonymous

    Posted December 12, 2011

    ~^..^~

    ~^..^~

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  • Anonymous

    Posted December 3, 2011

    Frost

    Yo

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted December 10, 2011

    Awesome

    Awesome.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted December 2, 2011

    Rain

    ;)

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted January 30, 2012

    Thorn to Amari

    I dont really like guys in general. And Dark is the only nice person, and hes a good friend. Hes probably the only guy i can stand to be around.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
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