Billy O'Shannessy, once a prominent barrister, is now on the street
where he sleeps on a bench outside the State Library. Above him on the
windowsill rests a bronze statue of Matthew Flinders' cat, Trim. Ryan is
a ten-year-old, a near street kid heading for all the usual trouble. The
two meet and form an unlikely friendship. Appealing to the boy's
imagination by telling him the story of the circumnavigation of
Australia as seen through Trim's eyes, Billy is drawn deeply into Ryan's
life and into the Sydney underworld. Over several months the two begin
the mutual process of rehabilitation. Matthew Flinders' Cat is a
modern-day story of a city, its crime, the plight of the homeless and
the politics of greed and perversion. It is also a story of the human
heart, with an enchanting glimpse into our past from the viewpoint of a
famous cat.