
Cats In Vintage Photos With Women Perfectly Illustrate Their Eternal Bond
This fantastic collection of portraits of women and their cats was created by Alice Maddicott, author of Cat Women: An Exploration of Feline Friendships and Lingering Superstitions.

This fantastic collection of portraits of women and their cats was created by Alice Maddicott, author of Cat Women: An Exploration of Feline Friendships and Lingering Superstitions. It seems like the purr-fect book for any "Crazy Cat Lady," because the cat love is no joke.
Alice is a writer, educator and artist from Somerset, England, managed, through her careful selection process, to capture the spirit of the time and the bond between the women and their kitty friends. Those who love cats totally get it, you know a fellow cat person when you see one even if it's in a vintage photo.
“I became a cat woman the moment I was hit with a thud of love that I’d never realized a creature could produce,” Alice admitted says. “I never thought I’d become a cat lady, but, as I think of it now, the strangest thing is that it is something you can become.”
“It is easy to miss the second cat, he disappears into the white of her floral dress, next to the tabby stripes of his friend.”

“Girl and cat are all the life of this photograph – her happiness so bright.”

“A mother sits, her daughter stands, made one by the curve of her arms. The cat has been grabbed to make a triptych – their little family – a tumble of curves.”

“Look at me and Mary, he says, we are one and you can never tear us apart.”

“Rosalind lifts Marmalade out of the pram – her precious patient.”

“There are some pains only cats can make better.”

“The invisible ribbons that bind her and Sadie are stronger than any threat. She will not leave her.”

“He’s wrapped in arms, she frames him, a tender representation of perfect teenage dreaminess, when the world was vast and full and for the taking.”

“The kitten she holds is Gretel, her brother Hansel is elsewhere, a black blur battling the wire fence.”

“This is not their first Christmas together and each year they pose together by the sparkling tree.”

“On her dress near her shoulder, that could be a tear from naughty claws and teeth.”

“She is smiling but it is the love for her cat that stands out. She cuddles him properly.”

“He’s going doolally, blissed out as she holds him so protectively.”

“Cradling the loose end of a washing line, she rests. A well-earned sit on the steps and a bowl of food for the cat.”

“Her neatly parted hair, clips in place, hides her true wildness, how much she and Moppet share and the joy of freedom waiting for them.”

“She doesn’t look mean, more frustrated and worn out, the feeling any parent of toddlers would understand.”

“This cat is somewhat grander and gazes more at ease than her owner, who is strangely still, arms obscured, buckled feet neatly turned out.”

“Her garden is beautiful and full of sun. Her cat is white and all candyfloss despite the strange grip she has on her.”

“She could have forgotten the strength of the bond she had with her cat then suddenly be flooded with the memory, months or years later.


Damjan
