Full of drama and adventure, their trip invites countless opportunities for the rabbi and his cat to grapple with all the important-and trivial-details of life. Zlabya falls in love with a dashing young rabbi from Paris, and soon master and cat, having overcome their shared self-pity and jealousy, are accompanying the newlyweds to France to meet Zlabya's cosmopolitan in-laws. They consult the rabbi's rabbi, who maintains that a cat can't be Jewish-but the cat, as always, knows better. The rabbi vows to educate him in the ways of the Torah, while the cat insists on studying the kabbalah and having a Bar Mitzvah. To his master's consternation, the cat immediately begins to tell lies (the first being that he didn't eat the parrot). In Algeria in the 1930s, a cat belonging to a widowed rabbi and his beautiful daughter, Zlabya, eats the family parrot and gains the ability to speak. The preeminent work by one of France's most celebrated young comics artists, The Rabbi's Cat tells the wholly unique story of a rabbi, his daughter, and their talking cat-a philosopher brimming with scathing humor and surprising tenderness.
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