Showing posts with label Erin the Literary Cat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Erin the Literary Cat. Show all posts

Sunday 17 March 2024

The No.2 Feline Detective Agency

 

by MANDY MORTON;  

                                                                                   


  


An Adventure Book Review by Erin the Literary Cat©, International Book Reviewer.

Hello, and welcome to my weekend Book Review featuring this week an Adventure in Adult Fiction.
 

If you're unfamiliar with Mandy Morton's works, you're in for a treat. We'll be reviewing the whole series of the No.2 Feline Detective Agency, which features two tabby furred feline detectives, Hettie Bagshot and her colleague and friend, Tilly Jenkins. 

Mandy was born in Suffolk, England, and, like Hettie, had a successful music career as a singer-songwriter. She also has 6 records to her name. Later, she joined the BBC as a presenter and producer of arts programs for local and national radio. The book's biography says that "Mandy lives with her partner, who is a fellow crime writer, in Cambridge and Cornwall, where there is always room for a longhaired tabby cat."

That the author is a cat lover and guardian is self-evident from the stories. And whilst the feline characters bring the magic that only cats can, it is the plot, settings, and sheer deftness and pace of the telling that, with our protagonist's natures, win the day. So, without further ado, let's dive right into . . . .



AUTHOR:  Mandy Morton

 

Cover art by: Unknown    

 

Published by: Farrago

 

First publication date Paperback: 2014

 

Current edition Paperback ISBN:  978 1788 424 431


UK Cover price for Paperback: £9.99


Kindle UK price: £2.99

 

Audiobook price: £13 (or one subscription voucher)

 

Pages: 257

 

Age range:  Adult


Any cats? Cats and no humans.


 

 

SPOILER ALERT

Some as to plot direction and characters.

 

 

Thank you to...

I am exceedingly grateful to Mrs H for the utter delight of getting to Read & Review, AND listen to this excellent book. She’s bought the series!

As ever, our views are our own, and we only share reviews of books we have bought, received as gifts, or received in exchange for an impartial review.

Foremost, the books we review are those we select to read, like, and feel our global readers deserve to know about and that we hope they, their family, friends and students will enjoy.


The plot

Sitting in the Butter sisters’ one-time storeroom, now turned bedsit and office, waiting for the phone to ring, is bringing home the awkward truth to Hettie that a detective agency with nothing to detect wasn’t a good business model. Just as she was wondering where her assistant and co-sharer of the bedsit, Tilly, was, there was a strange sound. Hettie suddenly realises it’s the telephone. More importantly, it’s their first case. Marcia Woolcoat, matron and proprietor of the Furcross Home for Slightly Older Cats, has a job for them. A case of missing cats, dead cats that are now missing, stolen from their graves on the grounds of Furcross! Body snatching is alive and well, pardon the pun, in the town.

Taking the case, Hettie sets about getting evidence. Onetime TV celebrity gardener and novel writer Digger Patch, now down on his luck and very grumpy, attended to the grave duties. Nurse Mogadon arranged and completed the Dignicat final acts for the cats, and Aurelia Claws did the makeup and nail varnish for the deceased. The cook for the home is Marley Toke, a black cat from Jamaica who buoys the residents’ spirits with her excellent Jamaican cooking—most of which has potent catnip in it!

It all seems rather strange, but a case, and more importantly, an advance of their fee, is what matters. By discovering who took the bodies, where they are, and the goods they were buried with, they will earn their daily fee and a small bonus.

But, before they can get started and get into too much planning, three bodies will turn up behind the Malkin and Sprinkles department store. Fearing the loss of her fee, which would help fund their food shopping and mean they can get a new TV, Hettie and old pal and Hettie’s ex-roadie, Poppa, race to the store to collect the bodies. What they discover when they do is that the cats are missing a lot of fur. In fact, the only fur left is on their faces.

As Tilly points out, the case isn’t really solved. So Hettie and Tilly start digging around, metaphorically speaking, and visit Furcross. Whilst there, they find Nurse Mogadon dead with a note saying she has taken the easy way out and is sorry for letting the awful things happen to the three former residents.

Now, things aren’t quite as solved or as easy as they first may seem. This is by far not the end of the case. In fact, it only picks up speed from here on in. Who stole the cats, their fur, and paid Nurse Mogadon to abet them? More importantly, and part of the fun of the plot, what will Beryl and Betty Butter’s pie-of-the-day be, and will there be any left come the end of the case! Oh, and if you are wondering about the TV, well, that plays an important part, too.

I’d dearly love to tell you more, but I am teetering on the brink of revealing too much. Suffice it to say, the goings-on at Furcross have not ended. There is still an awful lot of investigating, chewing over facts, pies, and a few well-earned pipes of catnip tobacco being smoked.



 

What did we think?

With the plaudits from the likes of P D James and all-round praise from readers, Mrs H and I will do our best to give our own enthusiastic yet balanced review.

When we first listened to this, book one in the series some years ago, we were enthralled by something quite unique. We had already started writing our own adventure series, and Mandy Morton’s book illustrated there was a market for good, feline-centric adventures that extended beyond cats being smart yet dumb sidekicks found in many cosy mysteries. In fact, there are no humans in the series, which instantly focuses the mind.

The recent and highly articulate and clever books by L. T. Shearer, which feature Conrad, a talking and quite independent feline in a human world, provide a refreshing angle and opportunities for the cosy mystery-weary reader. Criminal investigation taken on from literally multiple levels and with characters with distinct skill sets makes for compelling reading.

The same is true of Hettie, Tilly, and their world. Here, you will find an elegant mix of feline traits and human-style interaction in human settings without annoying humans.

Just when you think you have this new world sussed, the characters do something that is wholly feline and out of place, yet on inspection, it is quite delightful, logical and well-placed. One thing you will notice is that there are no police in this book. The cats just get on with life in, so far as I can see, every other way.

It is, however, best not to overthink things but just soak it all in. Cats are, after all, not beings to shy away from licking a plate or having a whisker face or ear groomed after a meal. And boy, do they love their food. All sounds very familiar and fun, too, as Hettie, Tilly, and friends plan meals, sweets and savouries around their investigations, murders and corpses.

We loved Hettie. She is grumpy in the mornings, at least until she’s had the first cup of tea and a cheese triangle on toast for breakfast, and does not suffer fools, though she is not perfect. But she sometimes admits to being at a loss and is ready to give up the detecting game.

But Hettie has a wonderful foil in Tilly, a much smaller, elder, and arguably wiser cat who once lived and almost died from hunger and cold on the streets. Tilly also adds extra humour by sometimes getting the wrong meaning or going off on a tangent.

Hettie is arguably our lead protagonist, but Tilly’s honest willingness to see good in all, her appreciation of being alive with a roof over her head, and her infectious positivity are way beyond what I have read elsewhere. Tilly is no Dr Watson. She has weaknesses. Her bout of cat flu almost killed her and left her susceptible. However, her passion for reading murder mysteries (which gave Hettie the idea for the detective agency) means she has a head start for solving crime, though her eagerness sometimes runs away with her. In our eyes, she is arguably an inseparable and joint lead character.

The first story gradually reveals most of the backstories of all the characters. The location for their home and office, placed in a one-time store room behind Beryl and Betty Butter’s bakery, is just right. It is home, warm and cosy, and when needed, by tidying things away into the sideboard, an instant office. Storing their clothes in a filing cabinet and hiding the telephone in the sideboard struck me as supremely practical, especially if you didn’t wish to take a call.

This first book's plot is original, twisty-turny, and highly entertaining. I know it is wrong to laugh out loud or chuckle at a murder mystery, and I don’t think I have with any other book. But this is one where you carried along, and there is so much to enjoy. There are plenty of such moments. PD James was not wrong in their appraisal.

For an even more pleasing experience, we recommend getting this and the other stories on Audible. Jenny Funnel, the narrator, has set the perfect tone for the characters—so much so that if I heard anyone speak like the characters, I’d probably have a giggle fit. Did I mention the names? I guess I did already, but the book has characters whose names give away their profession, like the librarian Turner Page.




So . . . Crunch time.

With fun, believable characters, chuckle-worthy names of cast and places, and amazing plots well suited to felines, this book is an all-around success on a par with, you guessed it, an 'Agatha Crispie' novel.

 

Want to buy a copy?

To get a copy, please sail or saunter down to your local independent bookshop. Of course, a feline on the shoulders is optional. There are plenty out there (both book shops and cats), and each shop is just waiting to serve whatever kind of mystery, fun and adventure you desire.

 

Mandy Morton's short author page at Farrago Books can be found HERE or type this: https://farragobooks.com/fb-author/mandy-morton/

Farrago Book's web page can be found HERE or type this: https://farragobooks.com/

Hettie Bagshot can be found on both Facebook and Twitter. 


We are joining the Sunday Selfies, hosted by the wonderful Kitties Blue and their mum, Janet Blue, from the Cat on My Head blog in America. Click this link to see Janet Blue's selfie page.

Small image. The Cat on My Head Sunday Selfies Blog Hop badge. Features a yellow-haired lady with a tuxedo cat on her head.

I shall leave you with a rare mid-March sun puddle on my new old duvet cover, refashioned and upcycled by the PA at the Bionic Basil blog. Do check out their latest stories on the Medium platform!

 


 

Till laters!

ERin






Sunday 3 March 2024

NOAH FRYE GETS CRUSHED

by Maggie Horne;  

                                                                                       



An Adventure Book Review by Erin the Literary Cat©, International Book Reviewer.

Hello, and welcome to my weekend Book Review featuring this week an Middle Grade Adventure Fiction.
 

This week marks the start of a short break for us. Well, maybe it should be entitled a short sprain cum crushed knee joint but not break, as Mrs H hurt her knee. Trying, of all things, to pull the horse carriage across the sodden lawn to hard standing so it didn't sink into the mud. Mud which has been caused by torrential rain here in the village. And not the sort of floods caused by our neighbour leaving his lawn sprinkler on overnight. I told Mrs H that we have a horse for pulling the cart, and he, even though aged, is well used to getting soggy and muddy in the paddock. Personally, I think Mrs H was trying to prove she still has 'it'. What 'it' is, I suspect we'll never quite understand. What she now has, is a crushed knee. Oh well, at least now she's housebound, I can get some room service 23 hours a day.

And talking of crushed, but of a different kind, not that I know about such things, let's get on to this week's FAB new read. The path to younger love never seems so fraught, or entertaining, as this. We hope you'll enjoy . . .

 



AUTHOR:  Maggie Horne

 

Cover art by: TBA

 

Published by: Firefly Press

 

Publication date Paperback:   28 May 2024

 

 

Paperback ISBN: 978-1915 444 530

UK Cover price for Paperback:  £7.99


Kindle UK price: N/A

 

Pages: 297

 

Age range: Young Adult


Any dogs or cats? 


 

 

SPOILER ALERT



Some as to plot direction and characters.

 

 

Thank you to...

We are exceedingly grateful to Graeme at Firefly Press Independant Publishers for the privilege of getting to Read & Review this amazing follow up book from Maggie Horne book before publication.

As ever, our views are our own, and we only share reviews of books we have bought, been given as gifts, or received in exchange for an impartial review.

First and foremost, the books we review are those we select to read, like, and feel our global readers deserve to know about and that we hope they, their family, friends and students will enjoy.


The plot

 

Twelve-year-old Canadian, Noah Frye, has just returned from her summer camp. Things have, however, changed in her friends, Luna and Zoey, since she was gone; they have discovered boys. Noah, who only teamed up with a girl at the camp called Jessa, feels left behind. A friend, after all, is not the same as a boyfriend, especially when the others conversations now revolve around how nice the boy is and kissing, or at least the promises of. Even introducing Jesse, who recently moved to Noah's school after her family came to town, to her friendship circle seems to go awry, as Jessa seems more popular than her. Noah decides she needs a boyfriend to have her first kiss and cuddle and thus remain actively engaged with her friends.

 

So, she tries, quite literally, through what she thinks are reasoned experiments to determine what is involved and if she can catch up. Picking on unsuspecting Archie, a boy from her school, she sets out to achieve results akin to those of her friends, and elder sister, Brighton. Archie's family have adopted Hank, a long-time resident dog from the shelter where Noah volunteers. Getting Archie involved seems the perfect way to get the data and, ultimately, the experience she needs and craves.

 

Noah has given herself a target to get her own boyfriend by. But her best-laid plans go awry when her PARENTS' home and garden renovating business starts to fail, caused by the arrival in the town of famous TV home makeover guru Brylee James and her Rural Makeover programme.

 

The resulting pinch on home finances means the open-door Halloween celebrations Noah's family holds yearly, a firm favourite of Luna and Zoey and all the other kids they know, won't be as glitzy as the other kids want. Noah fears her own popularity will suffer even more.

 

When, after a girls' sleepover at Noah's house, Jessa comes to the shelter with Noah, the whole dynamic of Noah's plan for Archie takes a tumble when, from inexperience in flirting, she insults him and hurts his feelings. So much so that the shelter's owner says that if she carries on, she will lose her job because of her bullying attitude. Jessa, quite reasonably, is confused by what she sees, mixed signals if you will, but ultimately tries to help Noah achieve her goal.

 

Now, because of all the ins and outs of this plot, the dynamics of Noah's family and the relationship between the friends, old and new and potential victims of Noah, I really can't say any more.

 

But as you might guess, things will need to, and do, go wrong so they can improve before we reach the end. You'll just have to read along to discover how things turn out for Noah, her family and friends. 

 


So, what did we think? 

 

We both loved how the young characters, friends and family interacted, the angst of figuring out life and the first steps to maturity, adulthood, friendship and, ultimately, love, irrespective of gender. 

 

Noah recounts her progress in a diary-like style. Each chapter has a heading and, beneath, bullet points of related matters, for example, things Noah likes, dislikes or wants to achieve.

 

Written most sensitively and wittily (despite our protagonist's misguided and sometimes blunt tactics) and told in the first person, Noah tries her best to navigate the changes within, and in her long-time friendship circle friends, Zoey and Luna, as the others discover boys and how to interact. 

 

What is quite clear for the reader, and I suspect deliberately so in a beautifully choreographed way, is a road map to understanding a broad range of emotions and oneself. Not everything in life is clear-cut. Friendships consist of more than just one thing. They can withstand many challenges if we take the time to understand our own feelings and those of the surrounding people. And why should these things be difficult, facts and advice obscured by others in an age of enlightenment?

 

The additional dynamics of a new girl, Jessa, Noah's parents' business problems, and Brylee James make this entire story so very compelling. For extra fun, Noah's parents rescue pugs, and have far too many around the house adding to the chaos of everyday life.

 

The twists and turns kept coming and kept us guessing, gasping and giggling. We were never entirely sure where we would end up with this read, which is why we loved it so. The final chapters are telling and appreciative of the situations portrayed and life. 

 

Writing at its very best, dealing with subjects for the young teenager in a form that is neither patronising nor slanted. Maggie Horne has created another go-to piece of literature for all ages that will help inform, entertain, and make a more tolerant society. 


Crunch time. 

 

An essential, balanced, unputdownable read and a rollercoaster ride of fun, tears, discovery, misunderstandings and friendship that is right here and now for younger readers and a recommendable read for all.


Want to buy a copy?

 

To get a copy, please sail or saunter down to your local independent bookshop and place a pre-order/ order. 

 

Maggie Horne's Author page at Firefly press can be found HERE or type this: https://fireflypress.co.uk/authors/maggie-horne/

 

Firefly Press's web page can be found HERE or type this: https://fireflypress.co.uk

 

We are joining the Sunday Selfies, hosted by the wonderful Kitties Blue and their mum, Janet Blue, from the Cat on My Head blog in America.

Small image. The Cat on My Head Sunday Selfies Blog Hop badge. Features a yellow-haired lady with a tuxedo cat on her head.

I shall leave you with a selfie entitled: Are you sure??? 🙂 🙂


 

 

Till laters!

ERin

Sunday 4 February 2024

SECRETS OF THE SNAKESTONE

by Piu Dasgupta;  

                                                                                       




An Adventure Book Review by Erin the Literary Cat©, International Book Reviewer.

Hello, and welcome to my weekend Book Review featuring Adventures in Middle-Grade Fiction.

This week's book review really doesn't need any witty preamble from me. It stands tall and proud and captured our hearts from the very first intriguing page of the prologue. Mrs H was taken back (decades/centuries) to her youth and let out a big sigh of satisfaction and appreciation for a work well written when we finished the epilogue. This is one author we will be keeping a close eye on for future releases, for sure.

So, all that said and done, join us now as we head to Paris in the 1890s. . . 


 

AUTHOR:  Piu Dasgupta

 

Cover art by:  Helen Crawford-White

 

Published by: Nosy Crow

 

Publication date Paperback:  14 March 2024

 

Paperback ISBN:   978-183 994 6318  


UK Cover price for Paperback:  £7.99


Kindle UK price:  £6.98

 

Pages:  272

 

Age range:  9-12 and upwards


Any dogs or cats? No, but a sloth and a pigeon play exciting roles. 


 

 

SPOILER ALERT

YES, some as to plot direction and characters.

 

 

Thank you to... 

 

We are exceedingly grateful to Hannah Prutton at Nosy Crow Publishers and NetGalley for the delight of getting to Read & Review this much-anticipated book before publication.

As ever, our views are our own, and we only share reviews of books we have bought, been given as gifts, or received in exchange for an impartial review.

First and foremost, the books we review are those we select to read, like, and feel our global readers deserve to know about and that we hope they, their family, friends and students will enjoy.


The plot

The prologue sees a rat run deep under the city of Paris, into the sewers, ending near where a man and boy work clearing a blockage. The rat sees a small gold object winking bright in the mucky water but is driven away by the sense of something "deep and slow and older than the city or the earth upon which it was built." Evil. The boy, Jules, spots the item; it's like two haves of a walnut held together with a clasp. A locket engraved with indecipherable symbols. It twitched in his hand like a living thing and gave off a sickly yellow-green glow. Pocketing it, he notes under which street, and possibly which house, the effluent has come from. There may be a reward for him if he returns it to the owner . . . .

Zélie Dutta has been sent by her father away from their home in the jungle south of Calcutta to live and work in Paris as a maid for Madame Malaise. She lives in an attic room shared with another maid called Blanche. The house was once the home of Doctor Malaise, discoverer of the cure for Blisterpox. The discovery had got the Doctor much fame and wealth, but he died a year later. He had been a member of a dark and decidedly dubious society called the Brotherhood of Blood. Readers will find out more about their dodgy dealings and wicked works later. Needless to say, it is not good. 

Being a foreigner does not help Zélie, and the other staff are weary of her, more so as she has heterochromia – different coloured eyes. They attribute any accident in the grand house they live and work in on Rue Morgue to Zélie and call her a witch. Items being lost and stolen get blamed on her.

Of course, that is all rot, bigotry and covering up their own mistakes and shortcomings. Our protagonist doesn't understand why she had to travel abroad and come to this house to work. It could have something to do with her father having to borrow money and thus using her to repay the debt.

Whatever the reason, she wants to get home. But as the lady of the house reads her letters to her father, she can not write about the dire conditions. When her father does not respond to her letters after a few months, Zélie becomes very worried, heightening her desire to escape the house and France. 

One day, on the way out to get some mercury-based powder for Madame's make-up, she bumps into the same sewer boy, Jules. He is holding the locket and is intent on finding an owner.

Zélie immediately recognises the locket as the one that her father used to wear around his neck. He would never speak of what it was or how he came by it, but he would never have given it up.

What I can and will say is that the locket used to house the Snakestone. The stone is cursed, like so many famous stones are reputed to be. And even though the stone brings long life, health and fortune to the possessor, it demands and exacts a terrible price – the loved ones of whoever holds the stone will die a horrible and unexplainable painful death. So why does Zélie's father have it, or at least have the locket? Could her mother have been killed by the curse?

Persuading Jules to take her to where he found it, she begins a search to understand why it is in Paris and what has happened to her Baba - her father. 

Now, dear reader, the book escalates by many notches. In the search for the truth, Zélie and Jules find new allies, are betrayed, and get entangled with the 'Brotherhood of Blood'. They, too, and their sinister leader, are interested in the stone and, it seems, have a connection to Mr Dutta. What of Madame Malaise? Is she just a grieving widow? Then there are the circus folk Zélie visits. Could they be possible friends? With lives other than their own lives at risk, the story enters one captivating grand finale, which — did you really think I'd give that away? 

Ultimately, everything in this adventure is intertwined, but not everything or everyone is as they seem. You now have the great fun, as we did, of finding out for yourselves. 


What did we think? 

A beautiful literary jewel, filled with adventure and a plot worthy of grander, classical novels. Steeped in the very essence of 1890's Parisian life, above and below ground, that leaps from the pages. Captivating and compelling from the first enigmatic page through until the very last. Sheer genius and not to be missed.

I haven't been hooked on a book so quickly or compelled to read on more than I was with this. That, indeed, is an excellent sign. What I found within was a delightful plot that entertained and provided oodles of character, adventure, suspense, heroines and villains, dark and sinister, spangly and exotic, all sewn deftly together with lyrical expertise and a hint of magic. 

It is very much of the same sort of magic Wilkie Collins infused into the classic, The Moonstone, which was written in the same era and has enthralled children and adults alike ever since. 

Finally, we loved the quote from Les Misérables, by Victor Hugo, about the sewers under Paris. That sets a flavour, a tone, at the beginning of the book that lasts throughout.


Want to buy a copy?

To get a copy, please take the main roads, rather than rooftops or sewers, down to your local independent bookshop. A sloth around the shoulders is definitely not recommended. 


Piu Dasgupta's agent's page can be found HERE or type this:    https://www.theshawagency.co.uk/piu-dasgupta 


Nosy Crow's web page can be found HERE or type this:   https://nosycrow.com/ 


Helen Crawford-White's web page can be found HERE or type this:   https://studiohelen.co.uk/ 


We are joining the Sunday Selfies, hosted by the wonderful Kitties Blue and their mum, Janet Blue, in America.

 

Small image. The Cat on My Head Sunday Selfies Blog Hop badge. Features a yellow-haired lady with a tuxedo cat on her head.



I shall leave you with a selfie entitled: Black and White on Grey 🙂 🙂




Till laters!

ERin