The Cat's Table by Michael Ondaatje

865 Words2 Pages

Michael Ondaatje is very much like the narrator of his novel. Both share similar aspects of their lives beginning with the fact they share the same name: Michael. It is perhaps because Ondaatje himself experienced the same voyage as eleven year old Michael that the novel seems so very realistic. Both are born in Colombo, Sri Lanka and each, at age eleven take the voyage of a lifetime by boat from Sri Lanka to England. It seems appropriate that as the narrator of the book recalls his past as a journalist deep in adulthood, the same may be said of the novels true real author. Only Ondaatje himself knows how connected the two journeys are and this blend of truth and fiction are married perfectly to create a dreamlike quality to young Michael’s story.

The Cat’s Table follows the archetypal journey of innocence to experience. Michael boards the ship expecting a three week adventure without parents “free from the realities of earth”. (7, 2, 14-15) In no way was he prepared for the changes he would undergo as the voyage progressed. Michael’s immigration from childhood to adulthood is mirrored with that of the Oransay’s route. In the beginning, Michael and his two friends, Cassius and Ramadhin, are in high spirits. Life on the open ocean holds no end of excitement and there are plenty of opportunities to discover and explore. Two objects of interest fascinate them: there is a prisoner on board as well as a knight; Sir Hector de Silva who lies dying. The boys make it their mission to discover everything they can about these two men who, while at opposite ends of the social ladder, eventually arrive at the same fate during the voyage.

Michael Ondaatje describes a relative paradise when writing about the first week of the voyage, but at t...

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...k with less than noble intentions. In the Baron, Michael discovers there are people willing to take advantage of children when he is coerced into breaking and entering. The narrator Michael explains that it was not until years into the future that he realized his misleading.

Works Cited

•http://www2.macleans.ca/2011/09/02/review-the-cats-table-a-novel/

•http://www.asianage.com/books/journey-memories-925

•http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/cats-table-michael-ondaatje/1100237961

Thesen, Sharon. "Ondaatje ,Michael." The Canadian Encyclopedia. 2002. Web.

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"Michael Ondaatje." British Council. British Council, 2011. Web. 22 Oct 2011.

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Ondaatje, Michael. The Cat's Table. 1st. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart Ltd., 2011. 288. eBook.

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