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"Of course I worry. What if the cops witness a cat opening a skylight and masterminding a robbery? The tabloids will love it." There's a new pair of thieves in MolenaPoint, California, a renegade yellow-eyedtomcat with a cold disdain for the law,and a scruffy human partner who isno better. The two, clever and silentat their work, are bad news indeedto crime-solving cats Joe Grey andDulcie. But when Joe learns the pair'sconnection to a good friend, and then an innocent couple turns up dead in show more the library garden, Joe and Dulcie must engage in some fancy paw work to unmask the deceptions and route the real killer -- before his brazen criminal crime spree careens madly toward them. show lessTags
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Cat in the Dark introduces another talking cat, Azrael, a big black tomcat from Panama. He isn't even remotely nice, except that he apparently cares about his human, Greeley Urzey. Azrael wants to convince the lovely little tabby, Dulcie, to come over to the dark side. Dulcie is attracted and repulsed. Azrael is no Joe Grey.
Azrael predicts three murders and that's what we get. I can't help wondering if Azrael was secretly hoping for some of them.
There are characters introduced who aren't what they seem as well as characters who are exactly what they seem. When is Chief Harper going to get a call from his mysterious informants?
There's a subplot involving a head librarian whose character is a disgrace to her profession. She wants show more Dulcie, the popular library cat, out. The library patrons and other citizens are signing petitions to keep their cat in.
I enjoyed the interaction among the characters, good and bad. There are some interesting arguments for or against our feline friends meddling in crime investigation. Chief Harper fears he's losing his mind. Poor Clyde is caught between his human and furry friends.
I've been liking the books more as the series progresses. show less
Azrael predicts three murders and that's what we get. I can't help wondering if Azrael was secretly hoping for some of them.
There are characters introduced who aren't what they seem as well as characters who are exactly what they seem. When is Chief Harper going to get a call from his mysterious informants?
There's a subplot involving a head librarian whose character is a disgrace to her profession. She wants show more Dulcie, the popular library cat, out. The library patrons and other citizens are signing petitions to keep their cat in.
I enjoyed the interaction among the characters, good and bad. There are some interesting arguments for or against our feline friends meddling in crime investigation. Chief Harper fears he's losing his mind. Poor Clyde is caught between his human and furry friends.
I've been liking the books more as the series progresses. show less
Cat in the Dark (#4 of Joe Grey Mysteries) starts with a series of burglaries, which Joe and Dulcie discover are aided by another talking cat, Azreal. And then, a couple are murdered, another person is murdered, and a dear friend is assaulted. Again, the two cats step in to help the police.
Compared to the previous book, this one took a small step backwards. The plot seemed to drag through the first half of the book, as the murders themselves didn't occur until well into the second half. The writing was confusing in various spots, so that I had to reread a numerous short passages to figure out who was being referred to. The transitions from one scene to another were non-existent in a couple of cases. The author, Shirley Rousseau Murphy, show more seemed to be trying too hard. She even created another talking cat, Azreal, who embodied evil, and then left this cat in Molena Point (maybe to reappear in a future book?).
Overall, this was barely 3.5 stars -- the cats saved it with some interesting observations and comments. show less
Compared to the previous book, this one took a small step backwards. The plot seemed to drag through the first half of the book, as the murders themselves didn't occur until well into the second half. The writing was confusing in various spots, so that I had to reread a numerous short passages to figure out who was being referred to. The transitions from one scene to another were non-existent in a couple of cases. The author, Shirley Rousseau Murphy, show more seemed to be trying too hard. She even created another talking cat, Azreal, who embodied evil, and then left this cat in Molena Point (maybe to reappear in a future book?).
Overall, this was barely 3.5 stars -- the cats saved it with some interesting observations and comments. show less
A cat as the detective. I mean you'd think it would be kind of anthropomorphic, eh? But it is a good read.
I love this series. There's something about talking cats that makes me happy.
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55+ Works 5,696 Members
Fiction author Shirley Rousseau Murphy grew up in Long Beach, California and majored in fine and commercial art at the San Francisco Art Institute. She has worked as a commercial artist and has exhibited paintings and sculptures extensively on the West Coast. She has also been a designer and an interior designer, as well as in a library in the show more Panama Canal Zone. Murphy has written several children's books, plus the fantasy novel The Catswold Portal, the Dragonbards trilogy, and the popular Joe Grey mystery series, for which she has won eight Muse Medallion awards from the Cat Writers' Association. She and her husband live in Carmel, California. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Cat in the Dark
- People/Characters
- Joe Grey
- Dedication
- For those who wonder about their cats. And for the cats who don't need to wonder, for the cats who know.
And, of course, for Joe Cat. And this time, too, for Luby and skybound E.L.T.
And always for Pat for his l... (show all)aughter in the right places and his support and advice. - First words
- The cat crouched in darkness beneath the library desk, her tabby stripes mingled with the shadows, her green eyes flashing ightm her tail switching impatiently as she watched the last patrons linger around the circulation cou... (show all)nter.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)And where moonlight washed the tall grass, their silhouettes twined together: one silhouette, purring.
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- Reviews
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- Rating
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- ISBNs
- 10
- ASINs
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