State Library of Victoria \ Inside a dog
Skip to main content

White Cat

Author:  Holly Black
20
12

Cassel comes from a family of curse workers -- people who have the power to change your emotions, your memories, your luck, by the slightest touch of their hands. And since curse work is illegal, they're all mobsters, or con artists. Except for Cassel. He hasn't got the magic touch, so he's an outsider, the straight kid in a crooked family. You just have to ignore one small detail -- he killed his best friend, Lila, three years ago.

Ever since, Cassel has carefully built up a façade of normalcy, blending into the crowd. But his façade starts crumbling when he starts sleepwalking, propelled into the night by terrifying dreams about a white cat that wants to tell him something. He's noticing other disturbing things, too, including the strange behavior of his two brothers. They are keeping secrets from him, caught up in a mysterious plot. As Cassel begins to suspect he's part of a huge con game, he also wonders what really happened to Lila. Could she still be alive? To find that out, Cassel will have to out-con the conmen.

4.46154
Your rating: None Average: 4.5 (13 votes)

Reviews

Jan 11,2013
5

Good heavens - 'twas freaking epic :O

While this is not HP level - 'cause HP is untouchable - I love how Holly Black can weave all the fantasy elements so seamlessly into the real world, like JK Rowling. It's just so natural how she can bring up things like Youtube and texting, and mix it up with the curse work, the gloves and stones, and leave you with things like a workers' protest on TV.

The twists! Gosh. I mean, some of it I saw coming, but then there's all this other stuff that's twisty, as mentioned, or just plain spontaneous. The whole book keeps you on an edge, as cliche as that sounds.

So completely fantastic and HIGHLY commended!

Sep 12,2012
5

This book was very dark and scary, but thats what I loved about it. White Cat is not your average book. Its a very unique book about a boy and the journeys he goes through, all of which are daunting and unimaginable. I bourght this book on a holiday to Sydney and read it every night from then on. Because its so big i didnt finish it in time for the drive home but it came to my adavntage, I could read it more! this book is written to perfection and apeals to anyone!

Sep 12,2012
5

This book was very dark and scary, but thats what I loved about it. White Cat is not your average book. Its a very unique book about a boy and the journeys he goes through, all of which are daunting and unimaginable. I bourght this book on a holiday to Sydney and read it every night from then on. Because its so big i didnt finish it in time for the drive home but it came to my adavntage, I could read it more! this book is written to perfection and apeals to anyone!

Apr 12,2011
This review is a spoiler. View anyway?
5

This is one of my favourite books of 2010. 

This book, the first in Holly Black’s ‘Curse Workers’ series, is told from the perspective of 17-year-old Cassel Sharpe; schoolboy, black sheep and con artist. 

Holly Black is writing about a world that is ours, but with a few differences. In this alternate reality there exist ‘workers’- individuals who can work magic. Only one in a thousand people are workers. There are any number of varying worker magicks, ranging from luck, to dreams and memory, and in the case of Cassel’s family – curse. 

Cassel is the only non-worker in his family. His grandfather lost his fingers because of a blowback from a curse (blowback being the price an individual pays for dealing in magicks). And Cassel’s mother is currently in jail for working a con curse. 

See, Cassel’s family aren’t just curse-workers. They’re also old-fashioned con-artists. Cassel may not have inherited the worker gene, but he certainly learnt to finesse the ‘long con’. At his boarding school Cassel is an underground bookie. He runs bets on which teachers are hooking up and how many times a year the cafeteria will serve ‘non-nut nut brownies’. He also does some forgery and fake-ID’s on the side. Cassel is one cool-cat, sort of a modern Ferris Bueller. He’s a bad-boy with a quick wit and is instantly likable. But just as quickly as you fall for him, Cassel forces you to reconsider when he confesses his greatest sin: 

Here’s the essential truth about me: I killed a girl when I was fourteen. 


So begins Cassel’s twisted journey to the truth. All this we learn in the opening chapter. And it only gets better from there. 

In the opening chapter Cassel finds himself on the roof of his school dormitory. He’s not particularly surprised – when he was younger he was a chronic sleepwalker (called somnambulism). And besides, Cassel is half convinced the resurgence of his somnambulism is due to his recurrent feelings of guilt – because he killed his best friend, Lila, three years ago. Except Cassel can’t remember killing her. He was found with the body, a smile on his bloodied face, but everything else is a blank. 

Surprisingly enough, learning the truth of Cassel’s murderous past doesn’t retract from the likability of his character. Even when Cassel himself tries hard to convince you otherwise. 

It takes a lot of effort to pretend you’re something you’re not. I don’t think about what music I like; I think about what music I should like. When I had a girlfriend, I tried to convince her I was the guy she wanted me to be. When I’m in a crowd, I hang back until I can figure out how to make them laugh. Luckily, if there’s one thing I’m good at, it’s faking and lying. 
I told you I’d done plenty wrong. 


The above is almost Dexter-esque for its portrayal of a psychopath trying to fit in. But as the story progresses, you begin to realize that the person Cassel thinks he is, the Cassel his family know and the Cassel readers are getting to know are three very different people. Cassel has a skewed view of himself, and both his and his family’s interpretation of him and his past have completely twisted the young man he actually is.

Cassel is not a bad guy – no matter how much he implores readers to be wary of trusting him. Cassel is the black sheep of his family. He is runt to his two older brothers, Phillip and Barron and reluctant accomplice to his mother’s mad cons. He comes from bad stock, but isn’t bad himself. He loves the con, but only because it was how he fit into his family and felt close to his parents. 

The story starts to get dark and twisted when Cassel’s sleepwalking episodes become linked to his brother, Barron’s, failing memory and Cassel’s belief that Lila is haunting him in the form of a white cat. Suddenly Cassel starts wondering if his memories are his own, if he really did kill Lila and who in his family could have stolen his past. 

Holly Black is one-half of the writing-duo responsible for ‘The Spiderwick Chronicles’ (with Tony DiTerlizzi). I've never read the infamous ‘Spiderwick Chronicles’, but after ‘White Cat’ I may have to. I have completely fallen in love with Black’s writing and masterful storytelling. 

Holly Black writes some truly spectacular flashbacks. So succinct and enticing are these flashbacks that they read like stand-alone short-stories. For example, the few paragraphs in which Cassel recounts his first ‘con’, opening with the words; 

The first time I realized I had a talent for crime was after Mom took me out – just me – for a cherry slushy. 


Black’s writing is completely lush. The storyline itself is a warped fare as Cassel’s journey takes him on a trip down memory(loss) lane. Cassel is a fantastically convoluted character – and Black really makes readers work hard to marry Cassel’s past to the young man we are reading and come to our own conclusion about the content of his character. 

I loved this book. I could not put it down! I have fallen head-over-heels in love with Cassel and Holly Black’s writing. I can’t wait for ‘Curse Workers’ book #2, ‘Red Glove’, tentatively scheduled for a 2012 release (too far away!!!) 

This is one of my favourite books of 2010. Add it to your TBR list – you will not be disappointed! 

Mar 11,2011
anonymous's picture
anonymous (not verified)
4

I’ve been meaning to read this one for a while, but for some reason just never got around to doing so! I’m not a huge fan of Holly Black’s Tithe series, so I wasn’t quite sure what to expect, but I was pleasantly surprised with what I found in White Cat!

 I especially loved the little details woven into this story – such as the constant wearing of gloves to protect skin-to-skin contact. Also, the charms to ward off being ‘worked’. It wasn’t just a ‘thing’ the characters did, it was full-on cultural thing… the fact that Cassel found racy pictures of naked women without gloves made me laugh. These intricities made me like the story so much more. Holly Black has constructed a whole new version of our world.

I especially loved our ‘hero’, Cassel.  Although I prefer reading through a female’s point of view, I found Cassel to be very refreshing and I enjoyed seeing things through his eyes.

I also should mention that I’m a huge fan of cats, so their importance in this story made me smile.

To be honest, I was a little confused at some stages in the story but I can’t quite recall why. Perhaps Barron’s using some memory work on me? Haha! I loved that each worker had a different strength and the blowback side of things was an interesting addition. I’d love to see some ‘good’ workers in action like they talked about; workers at weddings and things. We get to see the dark and shady side of curse-working, but we don’t see the good.

 

I also already kind of hate Cassel’s mother. She’s hardly in it (she’s referred to a lot) and I’m sure a lot of bad stuff is going to go down in Red Glove once she’s back on the scene. I’m definitely looking forward to reading the second book in the series!

Recommended to: Young Adult readers looking for something a bit different from the norm.

Feb 21,2011
anonymous's picture
anonymous (not verified)
0

I love life's grit as presented in youth literature and Black has managed to brilliantly integrate the urban scrounge with fantasy elements.  It makes for a compelling mix especially with her unique voice.  Disregard all the surface elements and world building and you have a story that thoughtfully explores family, isolation, sacrifice and responsibility.  There is a hefty amount of smoke and mirrors which weaves effortlessly around the more universal elements that struck emotional chords.  Black is an author that has eluded my attention previously, however White Cat has created an appetite for her perspective on teen life within a fantastical context.

 

People Who Read This Book Also Read

  • Clockwork Princess

    Clockwork Princess

    by Cassandra Clare

    Tessa Gray should be happy - aren't all brides happy?Yet as she prepares for her wedding, a net of s

    Read Review
  • Shark Girl

    Shark Girl

    by Kelly Bingham

    On a sunny day in June, fifteen-year-old Jane Arrowood went for a swim. And then everything - absol

    Read Review
  • Riding the Black Cockatoo

    Riding the Black Cockatoo

    by John Danalis

    An autobiograhical story for all Australians. John grew up with an Aboriginal skull (named Mary by

    Read Review

File 12746