The Stories
Story 04 of 10
Puss-in-Boots
The book’s comic interlude and its odd cog. After three tales in which male desire maims or kills, Carter changes key entirely: a bawdy, first-person farce narrated by a swaggering ginger tomcat, in which, for once, nobody is sacrificed and lust ripens into something close to love. The joke is serious, though. By letting sex be funny, Carter shows it need not be deadly.
The story
In the northern Italian town of Bergamo, a quick-witted, worldly cat named Figaro serves a penniless young rogue, helping him thieve and seduce his way through life. The young man falls in lust with a beautiful young wife who is kept locked up, jealously guarded, by her rich and miserly old husband, Signor Panteleone, and watched over by a hag of a duenna. With the scheming help of Figaro and the household Tabby cat, the young man contrives to get into the house in disguise and reach the wife.
The lovers meet, and what began as lust deepens into real feeling. The old husband is removed by pure farce: he breaks his neck falling downstairs after tripping over the cat. The young couple are united and inherit his money, free now to love without hiding. Figaro and the Tabby pair off in their own feline romance. The tone throughout is broad, knowing and comic, closer to pantomime than to the Gothic dread of the stories on either side of it.
A closer look
Reworking Perrault: comedy as method
Carter takes Perrault’s ‘Puss-in-Boots’ as her starting point but, as Marina Warner notes, splices and spices it with opera, pantomime and the stock types of the Italian commedia dell’arte to make something far more exuberant than its source. Helen Simpson traces its debts further, to the fin-de-siecle worldliness of Colette. The result is what Chris Power calls, verifiably, ‘a screwball sex comedy’, and Carter herself described it as the first story she wrote that was meant to be ‘out-and-out funny’. This matters for the collection as a whole. The comic register is not a holiday from Carter’s argument but a different way of making it: Mary Kaiser reads the tale as one that demythologises sex through humour, taking the menace out of desire by refusing to treat it as sacred or fatal. Where the Marquis turned sex into martyrdom, Puss turns it into a good time.
The cat-narrator and the pull of his voice
Everything reaches us through the cat, and the choice of narrator is doing careful work. He is a ribald raconteur, a master of innuendo who proceeds by rhetorical questions and comic exclamation, and his very name, Figaro (Puss-in-Boots), lifts him from opera and Beaumarchais, the scheming servant who runs the plot from below stairs. He is unreliable and cheerfully cynical, and he is emphatically male, animal and self-interested. Yet this is the narrator who engineers a woman’s escape from a loveless marriage, aided by his practical counterpart the Tabby, and Carter lets us enjoy his roguery while quietly noticing that the whole intrigue is conducted, and narrated, for male pleasure. Part of the story’s interest is that its liberating plot arrives inside a thoroughly laddish voice.
A comic bloody chamber
For all its lightness, the story shares the collection’s recurring situation: like the brides of the earlier tales, the young wife is an innocent shut up in a rich man’s house, her sexuality the property of a jealous older man. Her bedroom becomes, in effect, another bloody chamber, a room where a woman is kept for a man’s use. The difference is that here the trap is comic and, crucially, escapable: the old miser Signor Panteleone (Puss-in-Boots), whose name marks him at once as the doddering Pantalone of the commedia, is dispatched by slapstick rather than vengeance, and the wife emerges into pleasure and money rather than into widowed grief. The lovers end up ‘at it, hammer and tongs, down on the carpet’ (Puss-in-Boots), sex rendered as healthy farce. Whether the tale fully critiques the misogyny of its own genre, or simply enjoys it from the inside, is a real question: Carter frees the woman, but she does so through a narrator who sees women mainly as sport.
Key quotations
As a comic outlier narrated in Carter’s densest slang, and with the text in copyright, this guide quotes ‘Puss-in-Boots’ sparingly and works chiefly by paraphrase.
| Quotation | Method | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| ‘hammer and tongs, down on the carpet’ (Puss-in-Boots) | Colloquial idiom, bawdy register | Sex is staged as vigorous, comic and physical rather than sacrificial; the crude idiom is the whole point, deflating the dread that surrounds desire elsewhere in the book. |
| ‘Figaro’ (Puss-in-Boots) | Intertextual naming | The cat is named for the scheming servant of opera and Beaumarchais, signalling the story’s debt to comedy and pantomime and casting the narrator as a below-stairs plotter. |
| ‘Signor Panteleone’ (Puss-in-Boots) | Commedia dell’arte stock type | The miserly old husband is named after Pantalone, the commedia’s greedy dotard, marking him as a comic obstacle to be outwitted rather than a Gothic threat to be feared. |
Think it through
- Why place a broad sex comedy between the beast tales and the darkness of ‘The Erl-King’? What does the comic register let Carter say about desire that the Gothic stories cannot?
- The cat frees a woman from a loveless marriage, yet narrates the whole affair as male sport. Does the story critique its narrator’s attitudes, or share his pleasure in them?
- The young wife’s bedroom is another version of the ‘bloody chamber’. What changes when the trap is comic and escapable rather than fatal?
- Does letting sex be funny and physical count as a feminist move, or does the farce simply sidestep the questions of power the other stories insist on?
Towards the coursework
‘Puss-in-Boots’ is most valuable in the comparative NEA as a study in tone, voice and the treatment of sex. Its cynical, comic first-person narrator gives you a sharp point of comparison for the narrative voices of your novel: weigh Figaro’s knowing swagger against the flat, disquieting narration of Exit West, or the confessional, guilt-ridden retrospection of Amir in The Kite Runner. On marriage, money and the imprisonment of women, the wife shut up by a miserly husband connects to the constrained domestic lives of Brick Lane, while the story’s comic escape offers a deliberate contrast with the graver outcomes elsewhere. Use it above all to write about how a writer’s chosen register shapes meaning, a strong route into AO2. Develop the comparison on the coursework page.