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When frogs begin appearing in the antiques shop Rebecca has inherited from Uncle Oscar, her cats Rupert and Isabella instantly give chase. But why are frogs also turning up in San Francisco's City Hall building? And what does her late uncle's mysterious note to "follow the frogs" mean? Soon Rebecca is caught up in the chase herself, along with a crazy crew of her uncle's oddball friends-as well as his oldest enemy. With rumors of hidden gold, political conspiracies, faked deaths, and show more cold-blooded betrayal in the air, she has to try hard not to leap to any conclusions until she and her kitties can uncover the truth, warts and all... --Book jacket. show lessTags
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I enjoyed the 1st novel in the series and decided to continue reading the series. The 2nd novel is "filled" with the history of San Francisco, California (primarily the California Gold Rush era) almost to the point that in certain chapters it reads more like a nonfiction book than a cozy mystery. It also uses information related to Mark Twain's short story "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County" (1865) which was Twain's 1st great success as a writer and brought him national attention. It is then a natural leap for Hale to add all things frog into her novel but sadly that doesn't necessarily make for an interesting story.
I'm going to give the series one more chance by reading "How to Moon a Cat."
I'm going to give the series one more chance by reading "How to Moon a Cat."
Nine Lives Last Forever by Rebecca M. Hale is the second of the Cats and Curios mystery series. Frogs have begun to appear in unlikely spots around San Francisco: the Green Vase and City Hall. Somehow these amphibians are tied to a long lost fortune.
Interestingly the online publisher's description for this book lists the protagonist's name as Rebecca. Although the author does bear a physical resemblance to her protagonist and does have two cats, her protagonist is never named in any of the books. She is either "the person", "the human" (from the cats' point of view) or she is "Oscar's niece" or "the woman above the Green Vase."
The books in this series aren't typical cozies because murder isn't the primary motivating factor of the plot. show more Instead it's a mixture of local history, treasure hunting, and modern day politics. To truly appreciate Hale's series, one needs to know a thing or two about the California Gold Rush, San Francisco geography, recent San Francisco politics, and Mark Twain.
In Nine Lives Last Forever, Oscar's niece needs to "follow the frogs." There are the frogs of Mark Twain's short story, "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County" (link), a set of sunken frogs at the old Sutro baths (Google Map), the frogs in City Hall, and an old carousel.
My two favorite minor characters are the PM (previous mayor) and the Current Mayor. Though again not named, they are very recognizably Willie Brown and Gavin Newsom. show less
Interestingly the online publisher's description for this book lists the protagonist's name as Rebecca. Although the author does bear a physical resemblance to her protagonist and does have two cats, her protagonist is never named in any of the books. She is either "the person", "the human" (from the cats' point of view) or she is "Oscar's niece" or "the woman above the Green Vase."
The books in this series aren't typical cozies because murder isn't the primary motivating factor of the plot. show more Instead it's a mixture of local history, treasure hunting, and modern day politics. To truly appreciate Hale's series, one needs to know a thing or two about the California Gold Rush, San Francisco geography, recent San Francisco politics, and Mark Twain.
In Nine Lives Last Forever, Oscar's niece needs to "follow the frogs." There are the frogs of Mark Twain's short story, "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County" (link), a set of sunken frogs at the old Sutro baths (Google Map), the frogs in City Hall, and an old carousel.
My two favorite minor characters are the PM (previous mayor) and the Current Mayor. Though again not named, they are very recognizably Willie Brown and Gavin Newsom. show less
This is book 2 in the Cats and Curious Mystery Series and much better than book 1. The writing is less weird. In #1, the author adds strange large words here and there because authors are suppose to use large words? Hale did none of that in this book. The plot moved along nicely. The characterization and inclusion of cat details was much more than the previous book and VERY well done. One of the best chapters involved telling the story from Rupert's point of view -- Rupert is a cat. Hale has created some interesting characters and has some interesting locations/plot fragments.
The big disappoint to me was the climax of the plot. It was a non-climax really or a very subtle one. The supposed mystery was actually explained early in the show more book. The book basically followed the characters as they confirmed the earlier remarks. There was no big "ah ha" or even dramatic point towards the end.
Overall, the writing is improving, the plot still needs work, and the cats are getting better. I'm very much hoping that Hale pulls it together more in book 3. show less
The big disappoint to me was the climax of the plot. It was a non-climax really or a very subtle one. The supposed mystery was actually explained early in the show more book. The book basically followed the characters as they confirmed the earlier remarks. There was no big "ah ha" or even dramatic point towards the end.
Overall, the writing is improving, the plot still needs work, and the cats are getting better. I'm very much hoping that Hale pulls it together more in book 3. show less
This book was interesting. Again, same as the first one, I LOVED the cats. She handles them really well and you can almost see them. I even loved the chapters where she popped into the cat's perspectives for awhile. The story was also interesting, the mystery was a bit easier to see this time, and its nice to have a mystery that is not a 'murder mystery for a change. My gripes? The history-lectures seemed longer and more numerous in this version. After the first one I started to feel like I was slogging through major info-dump and it was getting in the way of the story. Worse when I'd finally make my way out of one, only to find myself thrown into another dump two pages on. I found myself skimming a LOT just to get to the next part of show more the actual story.The main character *still* doesn't have a name.Over all, I am curious to see what happens in the next book. But the sheer amount of info-dumping keeps me from being all that eager to find out what happens. show less
Good sequel to "How to Wash a Cat." More tunnels, secrets and fun dating back to San Francisco's wild gold rush days. Perhaps not entirely plausible, but still fun too read. Rupert should have his own book one of these days.
Just too unlikely--wait to read about the frogs climbing 4 flights of stairs--I suppose I will donate this.
It was a very interesting book.
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Author Information
Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Nine Lives Last Forever
- Original title
- Nine Lives Last Forever
- Original publication date
- 2010-07
- People/Characters
- "Cat's Person"; Uncle Oscar; Dilla Eckles Wang; Montgomery Carmichael; Frank Napis
- Important places
- San Francisco, California, USA
- Epigraph
- One of the striking differences between a cat and a lie is a cat has only nine lives.
Mark Twain, 1894 - Dedication
- To my mother, Carol
- First words
- Rupert's fuzzy white body meandered sleepily across the Green Vase showroom.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Your uncle used to say 'if you used them wisely, nine lives could last forever.'"
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- Popularity
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- Reviews
- 8
- Rating
- (3.11)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 4
- ASINs
- 3





























































