10% off all books and free delivery over £40
Buy from our bookstore and 25% of the cover price will be given to a school of your choice to buy more books. *15% of eBooks.

The Cats We Meet Along the Way

"The impending end of the world heralds a soul-stirring road-trip across Malaysia to find an estranged sister"

View All Editions

£7.99 £7.19

In Stock. Same day dispatch on orders before 3pm.

Add To Wishlist
Write A Review Read An Extract

LoveReading4Kids Says

LoveReading4Kids Says

February 2022 Debut of the Month | Winner of the Waterstones Childrens Prize 2023 | Shortlisted for the Branford Boase Award 2023 | Shortlisted for the YA Book Prize 2023

When dynamic independent children’s publisher Guppy Books put out a call for submissions from unpublished, un-agented writers in 2020, Nadia Mikail answered with The Cats We Meet Along the Way - a poignant debut with a punch-packing, end-of-the-world set-up, and unconditional love at its heart. Through its deeply endearing characters, this tells a stirring story of family finding a way through loss, loneliness and feeling abandoned to embrace what’s really important.

Until the Announcement “Aisha had been a seventeen-year-old student, who treasured her lie-ins and whose mother shouted about breakfast to wake her up. Now time was precious”. And the Announcement? Nothing less than the imminent end of Earth, with predictions of “the world wreathed in fire and smoke” in the fatal wake of an asteroid collision. How’s that for a mind-blowing set-up? But that’s not all Aisha has to deal with. Three years ago, before the Announcement, her older sister, June, left home and hasn’t been seen since: “she had chosen to disappear from their lives without a trace, and had chosen not to come back”. Now, mere months before the world will end, Aisha and her mother Esah want to find June, so they embark on an emotional road-trip across Malaysia with Aisha’s adorable boyfriend, his compassionate parents, and Fleabag the cat.

Though the scenario is urgent, the author has a powerfully steady style, as seen in her measured, bone-deep evocations of memories, and characters’ mourning of memories that will never be made - their sorrow and grief is profoundly palpable. Then there’s Aisha and Esah’s deep-rooted connection to the place they were born, where they hope to find June, and an unleashing of pent-up anger, grief and guilt before a love-filled sense that light may be found through even the darkest of days.

Joanne Owen

Debuts of the Month
Star Books

Find This Book In

Suitable For:
Other Genres:
Recommendations:

About

Press Reviews

Author

More

Collections Featuring This Book

Book Awards Featuring This Book

You Might Also Like...

YA readers

Looking for Lucie

Amanda Addison

Paperback

In Stock

£8.09 £8.99

YA readers

Powerful

Lauren Roberts

Paperback

In Stock

£8.09 £8.99

YA readers

Catfish Rolling

Clara Kumagai

Paperback

In Stock

£8.09 £8.99

YA readers

The No-Girlfriend Rule

Christen Randall

Paperback

In Stock

£8.99 £9.99

YA readers

King of Dead Things

Nevin Holness

Paperback

In Stock

£8.09 £8.99

Reader Reviews

See All

This book was quite slow-moving and it took some time to understand the main plot despite the novel jumping straight in. However, the short snappy chapters make it easy for you to understand the constant motif of having to chase your inner emotions which bond quite well with the dynamic between characters and generations.

Thought-provoking end-of-the-world story where Aisha, a Malaysian teenager who hasn’t seen her sister for two years since June left home to explore the world. However, the government foreshadow a disastrous calamity about to strike. Aisha, her Mak, her boyfriend and his parents road trip through Malaysia to reunite with her sister.
Nadia Mikail wrote this book which falls into the genres of Young Adult fiction and dystopia.
This book was quite slow-moving and it took some time to understand the main plot despite the novel jumping straight in. However, the short snappy chapters make it easy for you to understand the constant motif of having to chase your inner emotions which bond quite well with the dynamic between characters and generations.... Read Full Review

Ilham Quddus