Cat love in short form: miniature, reader-submitted cat stories of no more than 100 words, Spring/Summer 2026 edition
Last Updated: June 17, 2026
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Featured Illustration: Good Studio/AdobeStock
We asked readers to submit their Tiny Cat Stories no more than 100 words in length. The following are the submissions that were chosen for publication in the Spring/Summer 2026 issue of Modern Cat magazine.
Interested in submitting your own Tiny Cat Story for publication in an upcoming issue? Email tinycatstories@moderncat.com. (Word count strictly enforced; accompanying photos welcomed.)
Patches’ House
We found her in the hedge—softly mewing “hello” as if testing whether we were kind. Each evening she’d join us on the stoop, letting our hands inch closer, her fur dusted with mites that made us itch but our hearts swell!
Neighbours told us she’d been left behind years ago, yet she’d never left—keeping watch over the home she once knew. We even found her in a real estate photo, perched like she owned the place. That’s when we realized: we hadn’t adopted Patches. We’d moved into her house—and she graciously let us stay. Now she lives inside, our beloved, sassy queen of the couch!—Mirelle Inglefield
Yo, Josie!
Josie greeted us in an unusual way. She would look at me or my husband straight in the eye. Then, in a quick motion, she’d lift her chin, jutting it out a bit, before quickly dropping her head back to where it had been. To us, this looked like the way some young men, the cool ones, greet one another, sometimes exclaiming “Yo!” We think she learned this from her earlier human parent, a young man. It’s been three years since Josie passed, and we still talk and laugh about Josie’s way of saying “Hello!”—Gretchen Reevy-Manning
The Cat Who Made Me Love Him
I was never a cat person, but it’s been my karma to love people who are. I kept an uneasy peace with Peanut and Pushkin when I lived with their humans and tolerated Tugsie while raising my feline-crazy daughter. When she left town for six months, she gave me temporary custody of her kitten. Monsieur took up residence alongside my laptop. One day, he rose and sniffed my face. “Rah,” he squeaked. “Rah,” I echoed because he looked expectant. “Rah,” he responded. So began our conversations. When my daughter returned for him, I said, “Get your own cat. He’s mine.”—Fredda Rosen
An Unlikely Souvenir
On a June night with no breeze and oppressive humidity, something stirred in the South Carolinian brush; then a mournful, screeching cry. A small creature emerged: a kitten, orange and white and awkward, maybe only 10 weeks old. He had huge paws and wide, hungry eyes.
Our youngest was the first to pet him and named him Mimou. He had survived thunderstorms and the juvenile alligator living in the swamp nearby. He let us adopt him and we flew him home to Canada. Ten years later, acclimatized to the north, our Mimou especially adores those hot muggy days of summer.—Jessica Lee
She Purrsisted
After losing a beloved male ginger cat to cancer, I visited a shelter hoping to honour him by adopting again. Amid playful kittens, an older orange cat with a tipped ear and determined spirit leapt beside me and began to purr. Called “Garfield” and overlooked for a year, she was renamed Frieda—a nod to her strength. Even a brief, frightened dash into the dog room couldn’t derail her adoption. At home, Frieda settled in quickly, sleeping on my chest and offering daily affection. She had waited patiently—and purrsisted—until she found her forever family.—Stephanie Kalina-Metzger
Better Late Than Never
My husband and I were married for 30 years before we became cat owners. Through a neighbour, we adopted five-year-old Coco (nee Squeak), and life has never been so grand. Being retired gives us endless time for Coco, and we love belonging to a community that includes a great veterinarian, friendly pet store employees, and fellow cat lovers. We became first-time homeowners around the same time. A gift towel from a friend reads, “This house is owned solely for the comfort and convenience of the cat.” We wouldn’t have it any other way.—Anne Saulnier
This article originally appeared in the award-winning Modern Cat magazine.
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