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PHOTOS: Welcome to a Whole World of Shop Cats Beyond the Bodega

October 27, 2016 10:20am | Updated October 27, 2016 10:20am

The bodega cat might be a fixture of the city's corner stores — spawning radio shows, Instagram accountsillustrations and angry Yelp screeds — but it doesn't have a monopoly on New York's neighborhood stores, or New Yorkers' hearts.

Felines reign over Big Apple businesses from bookstores to glass bending studios, as a new book illuminates in text and full-page photos.

"Shop Cats of New York," out on shelves Nov. 1, introduces readers to 40 cats that charm customers and employees at Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens establishments.

"Working cats" they're not.

"Most of the time, these cats are more likely to play with a mouse or watch it go by," said author Tamar Arslanian, whose blog "I Have Cat" chronicles her life as a cat owner and single 40-something.

Instead, these kitties serve as neighborhood mascots.

A cat's presence "creates a little mini-community center," said Arslania, whose local shop cat lives in Gramercy Park's Wine Heaven, "and it’s funny when you realize you’re not the only one who loves this cat."

Devotees show their affection in all kinds of way: they pop in to inquire about the feline's wellbeing, they bring gifts, and they even present them original artwork, in the case of Valentino, the cat at the Carroll Garden Realty Company office. 

For customers who love animals, shop cats spark conversations and their presence speaks highly to a business' integrity, said Arslanian.

"For me personally, when I go to a store or business that has a cat ... suddenly I'm thinking [the owners] are loving people," she said.

Arslanian's book, with pictures by cat photographer Andrew Marttila, provides examples of rescues living comfortably in the kind of non-traditional homes that most shelters won't consider for adoptions.

"We really wanted to show cats that were truly loved and really a member of their community," she said. "These cats really have stories and the people behind them ... were very excited about sharing their stories."

DNAinfo shares five of those tales below:

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