This book was a really fast read... in the sense that I started skimming the book about a quarter of the way through so I could finish it and get it off my Kindle. And after reading it, I can understand why it was free.
Written in a series of letters, the author basically gives day-to-day updates of her life and the cat (Skeeter) to her friend. This was my first issue with the book - I literally had no idea who the author was writing to until I read some reviews of the book. Apparently, the person she was writing to was her friend, but I didn't see anything that explained that while I was reading it.
My next issue with the book - it's flat out boring. There's nothing extraordinary about the cat (though I'm sure the author thinks her cat is extraordinary). Are his antics cute? Sure. But they're basic cat things. And in the plethora of books about cats and their owners that's out there, honestly, there is nothing that makes this one stand out. You don't get to see the lasting impact on the author's life (if there is one). If anything, the cat just seems like a prop... something that the author looks at and goes, "Ooooo let me write about you." There just didn't seem to be any significant connection between the author and her cat (and if there was one, it wasn't apparent in the book).
Finally - the author calls this book "A Cat Tale," and while the cat is featured in pretty much every letter once you get roughly 10% into the book, more often than not, the cat seems to get mentioned in passing and then the author is off writing about something completely unrelated.
If this really was a cat tale, I'd be expecting a few things. First: the cat being the main subject/topic of the book. Second: show the lasting impact the cat had on your life. Finally: don't end the book suddenly and unexpectedly only a year into your time spent with the cat.
To wrap this up, the Amazon description was misleading, I understand why it was free, and I was very underwhelmed/disappointed when I read this book. This is probably the worst pet memoir I've ever read, and I would suggest other readers not waste their time reading this book (unless you want something to confuse you/put you to sleep).