In these nineteen original tail-twitching tales of mystery, cats from Maine coon to Scottish fold, tabby to Siamese, white Persian to calico crack all manner of holiday capers. Arbor Day reminds a veterinarian how a kitten's coat cinched a murder case . . . A smart young woman at Christmas discovers that the way to an old man's inheritance is not through his heart but through his cat . . . A family Hanukkah celebration gives a sharp-eyed cop with a fondness for felines insight into blackmail and murder . . . An abused stray at Thanksgiving sends a family over the edge . . . And many more!
Once again mystery fans will cheer as cats meet crime for a fur-raising showdown of deceit, detection, and a dizzying display of feline fireworks.
Martin Harry Greenberg was an American academic and speculative fiction anthologist. In all, he compiled 1,298 anthologies and commissioned over 8,200 original short stories. He founded Tekno Books, a packager of more than 2000 published books. In addition, he was a co-founder of the Sci-Fi Channel.
For the 1950s anthologist and publisher of Gnome Press, see Martin Greenberg.
I actually took my sweet time with this anthology, putting it away then revisiting it down the road. Overall, these whodunnits were well-written and most were light (but not “cozy”). The majority of the tales felt nostalgic and I was genuinely surprised to see that all were copyrighted in 1997! I’m looking forward to reading the other volumes in the Cat Crimes series and thoroughly enjoyed this beginning.
My Top Three: 1. “Auld Lang What?” by Barbara Paul 2. “To Grandmother’s House we Go” by Barbara Collins 3. “The Old Man who Saw Newgrange” by J.N. Williamson
From friendly and fluffy to crotchety and cranky, felines are the heroes in these holiday themed stories. Many holidays are included here from old favorites like Christmas and Boxing Day to new or holidays like Martin Luther King Day. All of the authors whose work is collected in this anthology have extensive bodies of work in multiple genres. This is a great way to discover some new authors and find some new favorite fiction, whether it’s in short form or at novel length. Several of these authors are well known in the science fiction or fantasy novel market. Of the mystery writers, several have series of both hard boiled and cozy mysteries. As for me, there are at least six authors whose stories have inspired me to try their work at novel length. I will be sharing some of those titles here in reviewing them soon.
I gave this one 3.5 stars based on an average of my individual ratings for the stories. There were a few I gave 4.5-5 stars to. Most were 3 stars for me. I also had a couple 2 star and one 1 star stories. Overall, it's a bit of a mixed bag for me. Did NOT like the one where the cat was one of the victims. In a book for cat lovers? No!
A must read for cat lovers. Each chapter is a different author, different story, different holiday but each has a cat in it. As any book like this some authors & stories are better than others. The majority is quite delightful.
A charming collection of short stories for cat lovers who enjoy mysteries. I had read a lot of Lillian Jackson Braun "The Cat Who. . . " books and think there is quite a market for cat lovers who enjoy mysteries. In some of these stories, like the first one, the cat plays a very prominent role in solving the mystery. In others the cat is a side character. So many authors causes the stories to be a somewhat hit or miss. The story that was told from the cat's point of view I know was meant to be hilarious but wasn't my cup of tea.
It's an easy book to pick up or put down if you are on vacation and visiting someone.
Lots of variety of style, lots of intriguing plot lines, lots of cats - yep, makes it a fun, thought provoking read. Great way to discover new writers & contemplate what others might do when faced with the task of a short story incorporating cats, crime, holidays.
I wanted something that is JUST PLAIN FUN, but the quality of the stories was not up to my expectations. Pedestrian and not worth my time. I read about the first 1/3.