Kit McCafferty's life is quiet, unremarkable and filled with cat hair. In the magical city of Coldstream, located on the border between Scotland and England, Kit is viewed as little more than mildly eccentric and mostly harmless. She passes her days caring for her family of five cats, feeding the local feral moggies, and maintaining relatively good relations with her neighbours.
All that changes, however, when a teenage werewolf shows up at her door in the desperate hope of renting out a nearby vacant flat. Kit knows that the smart move is to tell him to leave. The last thing she needs is to become embroiled in complicated shapeshifter politics. But something about the secretive young werewolf tugs at her heartstrings.
It's not long before Kit ends up caught in a maelstrom of mysterious crime and magical wrong-doing. Fortunately, there's far more to Kit McCafferty than meets the eye and she has a few dark secrets of her own.
Of course, anyone with an ounce of intelligence knows that you underestimate a cat lady at your own peril.
Waifs and Strays is the first book in a new urban fantasy crime series. Expect mystery, magic and adventure with a heroine who will keep you turning pages late into the night. There will also be a lot of cats.
I went in with no expectations at all, and I’m leaving feeling pleasantly surprised. I can’t wait for more 🧁
May I interest you in: 🐈⬛ a super daba$$ cat lady who is much more than she seems 🐈 a lone wolf in danger / more lone wolves in danger 🐈⬛ a mysterious kidnapping 🐈 more wolves and shapeshifters 🐈⬛ but MOSTLY cats
this was a lot of fun reading if you love cats you should love it. you have cats you have vampires trolls demons that I say cats? werewolves in so many other types of paranormal beings this was a very fun read. get your coffee find your free and curl up in a great spot and enjoy it with your cat that's what I did. ,
Helen Harper is another of my favorite and this debut book in a new series was a wonderful start. Even better it was a middle aged protagonist, Kit, with a lot of Cat, hence the cat lady. Kit is a former assassin, now retired, and rescuing cats in her neighborhood. When she takes in a teenage werewolf, who is then kidnapped, Kit and a new friend, Thane, race to discover who/what is behind the kidnapping before it’s too late. The book is not too fast paced but it’s classically filled with humor and snark. There’s a twist at the end that was shocking so it’s going to be great for the rest of the series.
This is the fifth series by Helen Harper that I read - she has become a favorite in this genre - and I enjoyed it as well! As the first book, it laid the foundation of the universe.
Kit is a cat lady - who is also more than who she seems. She's actually ). At first, her days are good and lovely, doing daily tasks, taking care of cats, until a teenage lone werewolf comes and asks her if he can rent her place. Then the teenage werewolf gets abducted.
I really liked Kit - I loved how levelheaded she was. Also her power was cool! Combination of her own skills and the "magic" . I also liked that she was slightly older than other female characters from Harper's series that I previously read.
In this book, Kit joined forces with another experienced lone-wolf, Thane Barrow (who had a backstory of his own). I thought this added a "delicious" dynamic too because it seemed that Thane would be the love interest by the time this series end.
I thought the universe was REALLY INTERESTING and I look forward to more adventure of Kit and Thane. Luckily, book #2 will also be available this year. Yay!
‘Waifs And Strays‘ is Helen Harper’s latest Urban Fantasy novel. It kicks off a series with the (for me) irresistible title: ‘The Cat Lady Chronicles‘ featuring the inimitable Kit McCafferty, a cat lady living in Coldstream, a town on the border between Scotland and England, populated by supernaturals of all types. Kit leads a quiet life renting rooms in her house and feeding feral cats but, as the tagline says: “No one is just a cat lady‘.
I wolfed this down in a couple of days. It was tremendous fun. A good plot, engaging characters with complicated histories, a fully imagined supernatural world and a lot of cats. Humour lubricates the plot but never drives it. This is a thriller/mystery designed to introduce Kit and her world and keep the reader on the edge of their seat while doing it.
Helen Harper's Urban Fantasy series range from the dark and tense Bo Blackman series (which I highly recommend and which has now been issued as a 55-hour-long audiobook containing all six novels) to the light humour of The Lazy Girl's Guide To Magic. The new series steers a path between the two.
Kit is not who she seems to be and is not typical Urban Fantasy heroine material. I enjoyed finding out who she had been and watching her being pulled reluctantly from the quiet life she'd intended to have in her retirement.
The plot is a nice mix of tension and humour. I was kept guessing at how things would work out right up to the last page and the final resolution made me smile.
The supernatural world is rich and the magic systems are thought through. And then there are the cats - who make everything more interesting.
I'm looking forward to the second book, 'The Dark Hiss Of Magic' which is expected to be released in June this year. I'll be going for the audiobook version as Ruth Urquhart's narration brings the book alive.
I think I’m really going to like this new series from H.H. At first I wasn’t sure. I love Mr. Harper’s writing style, it is engaging, action-filled, yet light and fun to read - even when dealing with death - and monsters - and evil. I was hesitant only because of the whole cat-lady shapeshifter scenario, it just didn’t sound that exciting. BUT… the story is filled with enough twists and really creative turns that I found myself thoroughly enjoying it!
*I do wish MacTire was the love interest, though… Thane is fine, but the uber powerful are always more fun to pit wits against our heroine.
This was fun. I didn't know I needed a literal crazy cat lady solving mysteries with werewolves. but it turns out that I do. enjoyable story, interesting world, lovable characters. not the least of which being She Who Hisses. I'm eagerly awaiting more adventures of Cat to be released in audiobook. PG/PG13, some violence. no romance yet, but some fun chemistry.
*Source* Kindle Unlimited *Genre* Urban Fantasy *Rating* 3.5-4
*Thoughts*
Helen Harper's Waifs and Strays is the first book in the author's The Cat Lady Chronicles. Set in the enchanting border town of Coldstream, straddling Scotland and England, this novel introduces Kit McCafferty—a cat lady with a quiet life and a past that’s anything but. Coldstream is filled with magical beings, including vampires, werewolves, witches, Druids, and a woman with purple hair who is a Cat Sith, a person who can shapeshift into a cat as well as something even more dangerous.
2.5 Not sure what this story is or wants to be. Or how should I rate it. As a crazy cat lady of middle age leaning I am both pleased and annoyed 😒. Trying to be less egocentric:
As all the books of hers I read this one too failed to hook me fully. It’s never strong enough (I don’t think I have ever read book 2 in any of her series). But it was nice and fresh. Then the ending came and it left me baffled. WTH did I read?
I admire Helen Harper's originality, and her character and place development is well done as always. There is a sense in her work that Scotland is somehow inherently fey at the edges that I rather like. This volume is also spice free, with only a rather slow burn partnership between our MCs. So lots to like.
The central power "fantasy" here is that a self described "middle aged cat lady" (41) is secretly a retired badass. I don't have a problem with a degree of wish fulfillment in this kind of book - I have my own preferences - and her relationship with the cats is part of her powers. I can't go further without spoilers but it is something she's worked to justify. But I'm not really a cat person and just didn't connect well with the MC.
I was also a bit put out by the ending. Being spoiler free, it was trying a subvert-reader-expectations path and just got up my nose. So -1 star and abandoning the series mostly for the ending.
Bit of a slow start but the story picked up once the main character started making progress on the mystery. Also I like Thane but the beginnings of the romance was very weak compared to other Helen Harper books? Hopefully there's more development in the sequel. Very refreshing to read about a strong heroine who is not lust-driven and boy crazy.
I went into this with zero expectations and you know what, this was fun! As kind of ridiculous as the ending was, it had me smiling. I‘ll be back for book two! 4.5✨ :)
I thoughly enjoyed this story and how the author writes this story. The Main Character is a interesting blend and you need to read/ listen to see a blend of what! The ending is Great!! Narrator does an amazing job with the various characters voices and the entire storyline.
Unfortunately I was quite disappointed with this book. The world has potential and so do all the characters BUT everyone felt like a side character. Very little information or detail, very flat personalities. I didn't connect with anyone so I really didn't care about the rescue. I'm on the fence about reading book 2 I listened to the audio as well and it was done well but couldn't make up for the lack
A solid start to a new urban fantasy series; I'm intrigued about where the story will go. Though an older than typical protagonist at 41 years old, Kit was snarky, witty, and had a rare power, as is usual in the genre. Rather than info-dumping all the details of this world, the lore was weaved in when needed in a more organic way that I appreciated. Cat lovers will appreciate the varied personalities of the many cats Kit interacted with, both those that lived with her and those she encountered out in the magical city. I'm not sure if this series is going to involve a romance, but I like Thane and can see him being a good love interest if Harper takes it in that direction.
Kit McCafferty's life is quiet, unremarkable and filled with cat hair. In the magical city of Coldstream, located on the border between Scotland and England, Kit is viewed as little more than mildly eccentric and mostly harmless. She passes her days caring for her family of five cats, feeding the local feral moggies, and maintaining relatively good relations with her neighbours.
All that changes, however, when a teenage werewolf shows up at her door in the desperate hope of renting out a nearby vacant flat. Kit knows that the smart move is to tell him to leave. The last thing she needs is to become embroiled in complicated shapeshifter politics. But something about the secretive young werewolf tugs at her heartstrings.
It's not long before Kit ends up caught in a maelstrom of mysterious crime and magical wrong-doing. Fortunately, there's far more to Kit McCafferty than meets the eye and she has a few dark secrets of her own.
Of course, anyone with an ounce of intelligence knows that you underestimate a cat lady at your own peril.
Waifs and Strays is the first book in a new urban fantasy crime series. Expect mystery, magic and adventure with a heroine who will keep you turning pages late into the night. There will also be a lot of cats.
Dear Helen Harper,
I read this book for a buddy read and found it far more entertaining than I expected. When we meet Kit McCafferty she is trying to coax a feral cat to come to her so Kit could treat her wounds and just make her life easier. Kitty turns out to be too stubborn for Kit to handle and we also learn that Kit gives home to another five cats with some very interesting names ( apparently those are the names cats gave themselves and prefer to be called that. Yes, Kit knows , no I won't tell you how she knows you have to read the book to find out ;-))
As blurb tells you teenage werewolf comes to her to rent a vacant flat and after hesitating Kit decides to become his landlord. Very quickly the boy gets himself in trouble and trouble lands on Kit's doorsteps.
The story becomes quite fast moving from that point forward and it was fun, but I did appreciated that the author allowed the reader to catch our breath occasionally. In other words for me at least the book did not become a video game. I thought the main character and at least couple of others were pretty well drawn and I hope for more development in the next books.
Of course in order to be a bad ass lead in the urban fantasy series Kit has to have more secrets than your average ordinary cat lady . I mean she is definitely a cat lady, but she is SO very far from ordinary :).
Unless author was playing with us there could have been a beginning of a romantic storyline too, but of course I cannot be sure.
I thought it was very fun how some of Kit's furry bosses were helping her at some points of the book. I liked that they were more just cute decorations if that makes sense.
(FYI I tend to only review one book per series, unless I want to change my scoring by 0.50 or more of a star. -- I tend not to read reviews until after I read a book, so I go in with an open mind.)
4.75*
I liked the world building and the entire premise of the book and the MC's background. I loved all the feline characters! I really liked the MC Kit and I really liked the male who I'm hoping is her love interest There's a second possible love interest but I'm really, really hoping that the author doesn't go the 'love triangle' route. Not just because if I wanted 'soap opera' I'd watch such, not read urban fantasy. I don't think the other male is a good fit for the MC.
I liked the secondary characters and hope that we see more of the non werewolves & Nick.
I did not see the end twists coming and I adored the latter one! -- I'm not going to spoil it.
I'm going to be impatiently waiting for the next book, which is out in June!
Adding to my 'often re-read' shelf, because it's going to be a book I'll re-read again and again!
First time read the author's work?: No -- This is my favourite of her so far!
Will you be reading more?: Yes
Would you recommend?: Yes
------------ How I rate Stars: 5* = I loved (must read all I can find by the author) 4* = I really enjoyed (got to read all the series and try other books by the author). 3* = I enjoyed (I will continue to read the series) or 3* = Good book just not my thing (I realised I don't like the genre or picked up a kids book to review in error.)
All of the above scores means I would recommend them! - 2* = it was okay (I might give the next book in the series a try, to see if that was better IMHO.) 1* = Disliked
Note: adding these basic 'reviews' after finding out that some people see the stars differently than I do - hoping this clarifies how I feel about the book. :-)
Helen Harper has done it again! Waifs and Strays is an absolute delight and might just be my favorite series from this author. I especially loved the twist at the end—it had me laughing out loud! Kit, the protagonist, is a no-nonsense, middle-aged woman who seems like an ordinary cat lady and landlord at first glance. However, she has a cool supernatural ability and a secret past that make her anything but ordinary. I loved her practicality, sharp wit, and the way she navigates the supernatural chaos around her. It’s refreshing to see a middle-aged heroine who is competent, resourceful, and not bogged down by unnecessary drama. One of my favorite elements of this book is Kit’s relationship with her cats. Each cat has a unique name (or rather, the name Kit claims they call themselves), starting with She Who Hisses. This quirky touch adds charm and humor to the story, making Kit’s home life just as interesting as her supernatural escapades. Read more at https://www.summonfantasy.com/reviews...
I really enjoyed this new take on UF. Kit is a unique protagonist. She's a middle aged single cat lady, but is that all? She seems very human and has a great relationship with her cats who have names like She Who Hisses and He Who Crunches Bird Bones. Things go south quickly when Kit takes on a teenage boarder. The story has a solid mystery and plenty of excitement with a good pace. The supporting characters are interesting but need to be fleshed out in future books. The twist at the end will drop your jaw. 4.25 stars