Ratings31
Average rating3.4
Cassel comes from a shady, magical family of con artists and grifters. He doesn’t fit in at home or at school, so he’s used to feeling like an outsider. He’s also used to feeling guilty—he killed his best friend, Lila, years ago. But when Cassel begins to have strange dreams about a white cat, and people around him are losing their memories, he starts to wonder what really happened to Lila. In his search for answers, he discovers a wicked plot for power that seems certain to succeed. But Cassel has other ideas—and a plan to con the conmen.
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There are not a lot of books out there that are so effective from start to finish the way White Cat is. It's a clean 300+ pages, and every scene, every sentence really, does an extraordinary amount of work. It tightly weaves an intricate plot with a dysfunctional family dynamic, all around this teenage boy, Cassel Sharpe, who is both a con man and a mark, a curse worker and not. Even his race is ambiguous. Cassel is always simultaneously in and out of everything. But I was fully into this book.
It's really hard to talk about how good White Cat is. It's just so solid. The characters are fascinating and dynamic, the plot is rich. I think the best part is the alternate reality, which comes complete with its own history, societal prejudice, and criminal justice system. But at the same time you'd have to squint to really see this world as different from ours. The only outright difference is that everyone wears gloves and charms to prevent being worked. Holly Black likens the criminalization of working - the use of magic - to Prohibition, which gave rise to organized crime as we know it today. She delicately explores what it's like to grow up in a family of people that are criminals just by being born the way they are, and what its like to be absorbed into a dark world without even realizing how deep you are.
There's an undeniable theme of manipulation and coercion in this book. Everybody's working somebody. To give them good luck, to take away their memories, to make them fall in love. Even when Cassel can't work magic, he works as a bookie for his classmates, taking their money based on his own fixed odds, getting close enough to be accepted but never embraced. No one is really who they truly are, whether it's because they are being purposely deceitful, or because they've had some part of them taken away. Cassel discovers that a very big part of him has been taken by people he was supposed to trust. It was disturbing to me on a very subconscious level, because it's never really said outright how horribly Cassel has been violated. He feels it though, and I felt it.
White Cat satisfies every craving between action and suspense, emotion and sophistication. It's got gangsters, assassination plots, mystery and even a semi-demented love story that's worthy of its characters. I couldn't have asked for anything better.
I loved Holly Black's faerie books when I read them a few years ago so, after reading the synopsis of this series, I had high expectations. While I listened to this on “tape”, read by Zombieland's Jesse Eisenberg (whose voice is definitely not made for reading out loud and was probably only chosen for “star power”) which undoubtedly effected my reception of the book, how this story was told was still weird and boring and I couldn't care about any of the characters or the world they live in. It started out alright but about 60% in, I was just like ughhhhh get on with it and stop with the dream sequences. They have neat names though.
Featured Series
3 primary booksCurse Workers is a 3-book series with 3 primary works first released in 2010 with contributions by Holly Black.