Home | Best Seller | FAQ | Contact Us
Browse
Art & Photography
Biographies & Autobiography
Body,Mind & Health
Business & Economics
Children's Book
Computers & Internet
Cooking
Crafts,Hobbies & Gardening
Entertainment
Family & Parenting
History
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Detective
Nonfiction
Professional & Technology
Reference
Religion
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports & Outdoors
Travel & Geography
   Book Info

enlarge picture

Cat Who Saw Stars  
Author: Lilian Jackson Braun
ISBN: 0515127396
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


From Publishers Weekly
Detective-journalist Jim Qwilleran and his prescient Siamese cats Koko and Yum Yum (The Cat Who Sang for the Birds, 1997) star in their 21st novel here, and while not quite as spry as ever, they're still the cat's meow. Qwill and his cats move from Pickax, where he's a newspaper columnist, to his beach house in Mooseville, probably on Lake Superior. Qwill rehashes gossip with locals and old friends, and observes Koko's odd behavior, which always forecasts an important event, although Qwill usually interprets the cat's clues retrospectively. Mooseville is abuzz with talk of the upscale restaurant opened by Floridians Owen and Ernestine Bowen, speculation about UFOs (Moose County is a sightings mecca) and puzzlement over the whereabouts of a missing backpacker, whose body Koko quickly uncovers in a sand dune. While fishing with a pal, Qwill sees Owen's boat anchored next to another; Qwill, his twitching mustache alerting him to skullduggery, suspects drug traffic. Shortly thereafter, Owen drowns. The solution to the one mystery that is resolved?that of Owen's death? comes as an anticlimax, while the mystery that's not cleared up?the fate of the backpacker?is chalked up by the locals to alien abduction. A skeptical Qwill grudgingly admits the possibility of aliens, cracking that cats, with their enigmatic behavior, may be aliens. With his 60 whiskers and gifts of perception, Koko is, as always, by far the most intelligent creature in the book. This isn't Braun's best, but her fans will adore it and only spoilsports will accuse her of, well, dogging it. Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Library Journal
In Braun's 25th "Cat" mystery, Quill is fighting rumors that aliens are visiting Moose County while feisty feline Koko keeps gazing at the stars. Very mysterious.Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.


Book Description
UFOs in Mooseville? Rumors abound that a backpacker's been abducted, and Jim Qwilleran's sedate summer may be interrupted by an investigation--with the help of his own little aliens, Koko and Yum Yum...

"Her fans will adore it."-- Publishers Weekly




Cat Who Saw Stars

FROM OUR EDITORS

The Barnes & Noble Review
Lilian Jackson Braun's new book is her 21st foray into the lives of Jim Qwilleran and the Siamese cats Koko and Yum Yum, and it's a refreshingly written story that is, as usual with Braun, more than a mystery. It's called The Cat Who Saw Stars, and it takes Qwilleran and his feline colleagues up to Moose Lake for a little R & R, which quickly finds the trio looking into the disappearance of a backpacker. The population of Moose Lake and Pickax City will never be the same!

Sure, you remember Pickax City, with its population of 3,000, which might as well be the entire universe to most of its residents. The local paper is called the Something,and the most popular column in the Something is "Straight from the Qwill Pen," Qwilleran's own words of local wisdom, which purportedly draw more readers than the horoscope.

And you remember Yum Yum and Koko, the two cats whose instincts and actions sometimes outwit their owner himself. And who owns whom, anyway?

Right now, those of you who have not yet picked up a Lilian Jackson Braun novel are probably thinking that her books are only for cat lovers and cozy fans, but in fact, The Cat Who Saw Stars stands out as a simply told but major story about a quirky town and its fascinating denizens.

You'll be laughing from the first page, and the mystery, as it becomes darker, is anything but cozy. This is a first-rate story of eccentric characters and an eccentric world — and you will sink into it and fall in love with it from the opening pages.

Qwilleran takes his life in stride. He's inherited a ton of money but managestospread the wealth out to Pickax City. As a result, his every move is noticed by the locals.

Wherever he went in the county, he drew attention, being a good-looking fifty-plus and a well-built six-feet-two with a moustache of outstanding proportions. It had a droop that accentuated his melancholy demeanor, and his eyes had a brooding intensity. Yet friends knew him to be amiable, witty, willing to do favors, and fond of taking them to dinner.

What's not to like? But Qwill decides it's time for a break, so he heads up to his somewhat inhospitable cabin on Moose Lake with the bewhiskered pals, and even there, he can't escape his attraction to a mystery.

Don't miss The Cat Who Saw Stars. Whether you've read the other books in the series or not, you'll find this one an amazing read. Braun mixes the humor of a Will Rogers with the characterizations of a Mark Twain, and it's all wrapped up in her own wonderful sense of mystery.

You'll be bowled over by this one, and you might just need to go catch up on the other 20 adventures of Qwilleran and the cats.

Douglas Clegg is the author of numerous novels, including The Halloween Man and Bad Karma, written under his pseudonym, Andrew Harper. His recent Bram Stoker-nominated short story, "I Am Infinite, I Contain Multitudes," can be found in the anthology The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Volume 11.

—Barnesandnoble.com

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Qwilleran, Koko, and Yum Yum are hoping for a peaceful month of July spent sitting on the porch of their cabin by a lake in Mooseville. It's not so far from home - but far enough away from the bustle and bustle of Pickax that Qwill figures he might actually find some peace and quiet. When rumors begin to circulate that UFOs are responsible for the disappearance of a stray backpacker, whose body is later discovered on the lakeshore, Qwill finds it difficult to maintain "vacation" mode. Then, of course, there's the knitting craze, which is attracting some very unlikely members of the community, and some highly innovative plans for this year's Fourth of July parade, and a dog-cart race. Yet all of this is just par for the course in slightly out-of-whack Moose County.... Things become downright eerie when Koko begins to pass hours on the porch in the dark, watching the sky for stars - or something. And as the inexplicable goings-on get stranger and stranger, Qwill starts to wonder who or what is in fact responsible, if not extraterrestrial visitors.

SYNOPSIS

Lilian Jackson Braun's new book is her 21st foray into the lives of Jim Qwilleran and the Siamese cats Koko and Yum Yum, and it's a refreshingly written story that is, as usual with Braun, more than a mystery. It's called The Cat Who Saw Stars, and it takes Qwilleran and his feline colleagues up to Moose Lake for a little R & R, which quickly finds the trio looking into the disappearance of a backpacker. The population of Moose Lake and Pickax City will never be the same!

FROM THE CRITICS

Tampa Tribune-Times

The Cat Who Saw Starsis Braun's 21st Cat Who Mystery novel and she hasn't lost her touch. Her Human characters are funny and familiar, while the two Siamese, Koko and Yum Yum, still sparkle. Reading this book is like dropping in on old and very dear friends.

People Magazine

A new caper from "a master of mystery who knows exactly when to let the cat out of the bag."

Library Journal

In Braun's 25th "Cat" mystery, Quill is fighting rumors that aliens are visiting Moose County while feisty feline Koko keeps gazing at the stars. Very mysterious.

People Magazine

A new caper from "a master of mystery who knows exactly when to let the cat out of the bag."

     



Home | Private Policy | Contact Us
@copyright 2001-2005 ReadingBee.com