The Book Review: Would you like a kitten with that book?
Plus: our critic on the poetry of Jane Kenyon.
Books
July 25, 2025
This picture shows an orange cat standing in the window of Wild Rumpus Books in Minneapolis.
Booker T. Jones enjoys napping in the front window of Wild Rumpus. Eric Ruby for The New York Times

Dear readers,

It’s not every day you encounter a bookstore employee with a tail.

My colleague Liz Egan, as she so often does, recently landed a dream assignment: profiling the various cats, dogs, rabbits, chinchillas and lizards that populate bookstores across the United States.

Animals have long been furry, steadfast mascots for bookstores, and a number of businesses have put themselves on the map with their creatures, Egan reports. (See: a tortoise in Vermont named Veruca Salt who has amassed a four-digit online following.) While it’s hard to know whether animals promote book sales, they certainly encourage foot traffic.

And, of course, they inspire great works of literature themselves: I recently reread “H Is for Hawk,” Helen Macdonald’s magnificent autobiography, which is in good company among a spate of new books about writers and wild animals.

I wish you a weekend of off-leash reading!

Like this email?
Sign-up here or forward it to your friends. Have a suggestion or two on how we can improve it? Let us know at books@nytimes.com. Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

LOOKING FOR YOUR NEXT READ?

This is the cover of Sangu Mandanna’s “A Witch’s Guide to Magical Innkeeping”

Editors’ Choice

6 New Books We Love This Week

Reading recommendations from critics and editors at The New York Times.

Let Us Help You Find Your Next Book

Reading picks from Book Review editors, guaranteed to suit any mood.

By The New York Times Books Staff

The illustration shows a person in a hat lounging on the ground, eating an apple and reading a book. There are picnic supplies on the ground, and various ants, worms and butterflies on and around the reader.

The New York Times’s Summer Reading Bucket List

Read along with the Book Review this summer: Can you check off five items before fall arrives?

By The New York Times Books Staff

We hope you’ve enjoyed this newsletter, which is made possible through subscriber support. Subscribe to The New York Times.

THIS WEEK IN THE BOOK REVIEW

THE BOOK REVIEW PODCAST

Four books, one yellow, one orange, one brown and one blue, standing, each separate from the others, on a light yellow surface against a darker yellow wall. "The Book Review" is written in white on the top left, and a "T" logo for the The New York Times is on the bottom.

The Book Review

Book Club: Let’s Talk About ‘The Catch,’ by Yrsa Daley-Ward

The poet’s debut novel features estranged sisters and a missing mother who seemingly reappears decades later.

play button

54 MIN LISTEN

ETC.

A composite illustration shows details from the covers of eight children’s books, described below.

The New York Times

Children’s Books

Lemony Snicket’s Anti-Summer Summer Reading List

For kids who hide indoors with a pile of books until the autumnal chill arrives.

By Lemony Snicket

Article Image

Rebecca Clarke

By the Book

Esi Edugyan Has a Long List of Canadian Writers to Recommend

An adaptation of her 19th-century-set novel “Washington Black” is streaming on Hulu. But she’s not totally comfortable with the historical fiction label.

A composite illustration shows details from the covers of eight children’s books about Greek mythology, most of which are depicted below.

The New York Times

Children’s Books

Katherine Marsh’s Favorite Greek Mythology Books for Young Readers

The author of the Myth of Monsters series recommends works that tell, or retell, these strange and wonderful stories for virtually every age group.

By Katherine Marsh

Article Image

Ben Hickey

Do You Know the Places That Inspired These Authors?

Try this literary geography quiz about places around England that influenced some of the country’s most famous authors.

By J. D. Biersdorfer

BEST SELLERS

If you received this newsletter from someone else, subscribe here.

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for Books from The New York Times.

To stop receiving Books, unsubscribe. To opt out of other promotional emails from The Times, including those regarding The Athletic, manage your email settings.

Subscribe to The Times

Connect with us on: