Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Hugh Rennert #2

The Cat Screams

Rate this book
When Mura the Siamese cat screams, Death is sure to strike! At Madame Fournier's quarantined pension in Taxco, Mexico's fabled "silver city," Death remorselessly stalks new prey. Among these confined guests-the actress on the run, the playboy in pursuit, the disagreeable newspaper columnist, the New York artist, the archaeology professor, the enigmatic matron and the highly discreet gentleman from Dallas, Texas-who will live and who will die? Can Hugh Rennert, U.S. Customs Service agent and something of an amateur detective, unmask a murderer and end a deadly rampage? Are the killings really the work of a Nagual, a human who can take animal form? Why won't the Mexican house servants, Esteban, Marie and Micaela, tell what they know? When The Cat Screams, the second Hugh Rennert mystery, originally appeared in 1934, Todd Downing's eminent American publisher, Doubleday, Doran's Crime Club, proclaimed the novel "one of the most unusual mystery stories the Crime Club has ever published." With The Cat Screams, Todd Downing had fashioned a plot that was spellbindingly exotic yet also "plausible and logical." Doubleday, Doran chose The Cat Screams as a monthly Crime Club Selection, an honor only very rarely granted an author new to its list. Don't let the screaming of Mura frighten you away. . . . Read The Cat Screams and see for yourself why as a literary stylist Todd Downing was "far superior to the average mystery writer."

228 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1934

2 people are currently reading
30 people want to read

About the author

Todd Downing

18 books3 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
3 (11%)
4 stars
14 (53%)
3 stars
7 (26%)
2 stars
2 (7%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Richard Spilman.
22 reviews6 followers
April 26, 2013
Although the edition is poorly put together, the story itself is fun (though its glib North American smugness is a bit off putting). A very well put together puzzle novel of the Christie type, which suffers mostly from the fact that, like Sherlock, the detective "knows" early on but never even suggests the truth to the authorities, even though the killer is still functioning throughout.
Profile Image for Eden Thompson.
996 reviews5 followers
December 22, 2023
Visit JetBlackDragonfly (The Man Who Read Too Much) at www.edenthompson.ca/blog

A quirky little mystery from 1934, this takes place in Mexico around the resort village of Taxco. It's one of several Mexican themed mysteries written by Tod Downing, who was a quarter Choctaw. Other novels of his include his first in 1933 Murder on Tour, Vultures In The Sky and Murder Over Mexico. It's an unusual mystery in the style of Mignon G. Eberhart, beginning with a strange epidemic of random suicides sweeping the village.

Hugh Rennert is travelling by train when he meets Mr. Riddle, the wastrel son of an oil millionaire. They are both headed for the pension of old Madame Fournier on the hillside high above the town. Riddle is going to meet up with his beloved Gwendolyn Noon, a Broadway star of some years who is in Mexico on mysterious business, as well as escaping her love for Riddle because of his disapproving father. Other guests include Mr. Shaul - the gossip columnist, Dr. Parkyn - the archeologist, Mandarich - the artist, Mrs. Giddings - Gwendolyn's maid, Mr. Crenshaw - the private eye, and some disgruntled staff - notably Esteban, who has contracted what the natives call Pinto, a blotchy skin rash that might be smallpox. The pension is quickly quarantined by local soldiers no less, trapping them all inside for a few days until Esteban can be properly diagnosed.

You would think that when Mr. Shaul winds up smothered to death with a pillow they could easily discover who did it, but it will take another death, an investigation into it all by General Perez (with Hugh Rennert acting as his "interpreter" as an excuse to play detective) and revelations of secret marriages, drug addiction, blackmail, bankruptcy, and arsenic poisonings before the holiday is over. Meanwhile, native superstitions run wild though the minds of the chef (a local curandera who dispenses magical potions) and many guests when a missing Jade artifact disturbs the ancient ones, and Mura - the Siamese cat - wanders the house in the night, screaming in the moments before another evil befalls the house.
"Naugal", Esteban calls through his delirium, evoking the name of the Mesoamerican folk spirit who has the power to transform spiritually or physically from human into animal form. Yes, Downing has incorporated quite a lot of native spirituality and mythical beliefs into this mystery. Over the course of a few days, Rennert is able to tie all the clues together better than I did, solving not only the murders but explaining the rash of suicides as well. A clever result I did not see coming.
As I read it, I found the pace as slow as a hot afternoon siesta, but looking back at the clues and the twists, (and knowing this was written and enjoyed way back in 1933 but still holds up today) my hat is off to Downing.

Recommended (if you can find a copy!).
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.