Cat Fear No Evil FROM OUR EDITORS
The Barnes & Noble Review
Shattered families and long-hidden secrets (both human and feline) are the themes of this ninth volume of Shirley Rousseau Murphy's popular mystery series about exceptionally clever cats who can carry on a conversationᄑand an investigation. As autumn's chill settles on the quiet town of Molena Point, California, three unusual burglaries have the gossips buzzing. The victims are all respected citizens, and each had only a single, favorite item stolen from amid a collection of similar, equally vulnerable, valuables. A diamond choker, a precious painting, and a painstakingly restored antique car -- each protected by top-notch locks and alarm systems -- have vanished without a trace. As news of the break-ins spreads, it's obvious that a very skilled and selective thief has come to town. Clyde Damen isn't depending solely on the police to sniff out the crook who stole his beloved Packard. He's fortunate to share a house with one of the finest detectives in town, the large gray tomcat named Joe Grey. Joe, and his fellow sentient felines, Dulcie and Kit, have plenty of crime-fighting experience -- their accurate, anonymous tips make them the best snitches the local police department has. From the first, however, Joe knows this case is going to be a rough one. Though other clues are few and far between, the evil cat burglar Azrael's scent is all over Joe's territoryᄑincluding the crime scenes. As danger stalks some of Joe's favorite people, and the rash of wrongdoing escalates, with valuables, long-protected secrets, and lives at risk amid an ever-expanding crime wave, Joe and his fellow feline detectives are quick to spring into action. Sue Stone
FROM THE PUBLISHER
"When antiques and valuables begin to disappear from residents' homes, Joe Grey knows that something is very wrong in sleepy Molena Point, California. Could the thief be a local or, even worse, is it the old crook who may be connected to Azrael, the sinister, yellow-eyed cat who terrorized Joe and Dulcie years ago, and whose return has Joe's fur standing on edge?" "Even a seasoned tomcat like Joe isn't prepared for the shock that awaits Molena Point residents at the opening for artist Charlie Harper. While guests are dining on hors d'oeuvres and fine wine at the joyous celebration, a young healthy waiter drops dead at Charlie's feet." Meanwhile, just north of Molena Point, in San Francisco, the cats' friend Kate, a woman with a troubling secret, is followed by a stranger and robbed. Her apartment is then gutted, with claw marks and black cat hairs leading her to suspect the vicious tomcat Azrael. In the most dramatic investigation of their lives, Joe Grey, Dulcie, and Kit, following diverse leads, scratch out the truth and, with cunning feline skills, restore a distraught village to its usual cozy tranquility.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
Once again sleek feline sleuth Joe Grey and his tabby partner, Dulcie, prove to be the best snitches the Molena Point, Calif., police ever had in this superior cat cozy, the ninth entry in Murphy's popular series (after 2003's Cat Seeing Double). A sophisticated thief has been targeting the small coastal town, stealing prize jewelry and paintings, despite elaborate security measures. Also missing is a vintage 1927 Packard belonging to Joe's owner, Clyde Damen. The ante is raised when a waiter at an art gallery opening suddenly falls dead and a local realtor gets blown up in a gas explosion. Meanwhile, someone is stalking interior designer Kate Osborne, whose apartment is invaded by ferocious tomcat Azrael, an old adversary of Joe's, and the avaricious Consuela Benton is leading astray troubled teenager Dillon Thurwell, whose mother is having an affair with a suave art collector. As usual, the relationships between the lively human characters and the talking cats in whom they confide their problems provide as much interest as the crime solving. The intricate and absorbing plot keeps the reader in suspense throughout. (Mar. 5) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
Library Journal
Several thefts of antiques and jewelry and the murder of a waiter at artist Charlie Harper's opening send cats Joe Grey and Dulcie (Cat Seeing Double) racing for help. Friend Kate is robbed, too, and a strange cat shows up at her house. For all those aficionados of feline mysteries. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
The latest outing of the super-feline trio headed by hard-boiled Joe Grey (Cat Laughing Last, 2002) begins with a bang: A bomb goes off in a church just before the long-anticipated wedding of Police Chief Max Harper and Charlie Getz in the northern California town of Molena Point. Because the feline loose cannon known as "the kit" uses her sharp claws and teeth to keep a ragamuffin boy from detonating the bomb at a more deadly moment, no one is seriously injured. The boy, Curtis Farger, is apprehended, but it turns out that heᄑs been under the command of his grandfather, no kindly old man, who escapes in the confusion. As for Curtis, Ryan Flannery, a building contractor newly arrived at Molena Point, recognizes him from her recent remodeling job up in San Andreas, where he ran with a pack of boys and a Weimaraner. Ryan hasnᄑt long to wonder about Curtis before her estranged husband, Rupert Dannizer, is found shot dead in her garage. Just as mysteriously, her old acquaintance, the Weimaraner, appears at her door. Not to worry, though: Joe Grey is on the case. He undertakes surveillance, searches houses, and places cell phone calls that reveal the killer. Once sheᄑs invented semihuman cats, Murphy has apparently exhausted her novelistᄑs imagination. Anyone who mistreats animals is a bad guy, including the Ice Maiden dominatrix. And the cats themselves act according to gendered human stereotypes. Why bother lodging such conventionally human minds within feline bodies?