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Indiespensable

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Fup. Store Cat.

Chapter 164

In Loving Memory
Fup. Store Cat.
1988 — 2007

fup 18 fup 19
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Fup. Store Cat.
Fup watercolor courtesy of reader Linda McDougall. Click here for a larger view.
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If the dog they'd known for years could change so drastically, Wiggums and Kit wondered, could their own identities reliably persist?

It's not as if Bandit had been pining for feline companions. Fup arrived and — presto! Different dog. Was some kind of voodoo at work? How else to account for the turnabout? Might one day some wayward mallard or turtle show up and cause a similar transformation in one of the cats?

Kit feared a looming existential crisis. If you couldn't reliably conform to your own expectations, how could you ever trust anyone else to stay the same?

That Saturday marked the end of Fup's first week in Boring. After dinner, Wiggums broke down and asked, "What have you done to our dog?"

Fup shrugged.

"Until you got here," Wiggums continued, "Bandit wouldn't let Kit and me into the living room. And now, this." With a clenched paw, Wiggums poked the dog's hind end. Bandit merely sighed.

And so Fup addressed the German shepherd directly. "Tell them," she prodded, "what I did to you."

Bandit's eyes opened wide. We weren't going to talk about this, they seemed to be saying.

"Tell us," Kit pleaded.

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The Trip to Kahani

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Read the press release.

Follow the links to more Fup adventures
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Fup's Picks

That Cat That Changed My Life: 50 Cats Talk About How They Became Who They Are That Cat That Changed My Life: 50 Cats Talk About How They Became Who They Are
by Bruce Eric Kaplan

"All these cats lead exciting and varied lives wholly independent of the human race," notes the editor in his Introduction. Well, duh. Scant attention has been paid to the role of community in modern cat culture, so what a relief that here, finally, fifty articulate felines set the record straight. Funny, sad, occasionally shocking, but never less than true, these brave monologues reaffirm our interdependency in ways that choreographed public displays such as Paws Across America never can.

Unleashed: Poems by Writers' Dogs Unleashed: Poems by Writers' Dogs
by Amy Hempel

In "Dog Kibble," Tasha Baxter's verse exhibits a brutal economy of words: "Life is never meaningless," her villanelle announces, "there is always food." Here and throughout this collection these authors demand your attention, as if to bark, "You can send me to my room for yelling at the neighbors but you cannot silence what woofs in my heart!" Among the selections nominated for Best American Writing by Pets 2000 are Bob Barker Barry's sordid and hilarious hallucinogenic escapades with Lynda; a tragic, posthumous prose poem by Marrow Irving; and Sadie Louise Lamott's "Spoon River Sadie Louise," a wildly metered exploration of the cross-cultural dynamics within a household occupied by dogs, cats, birds, and small children. The sheer intellect of these collected pieces will renew your faith in dogs.

Is Your Cat Too Fat?Is Your Cat Too Fat?
by Bronwen Meredith

Too fat for what? And what business is it of this Meredith person's anyway? Bronwen sounds like the kind of lady I wouldn't like at all.

 

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