Catastrophe: A Highland Murder Most Fowl
by Lucinda Hare
Following Marie Kondo's advice, I did not finish this book. I read about 40% of it, then scanned to the end to see if I was correct. Yep. Predictable, plodding, not for me.
Yet, it should have been. I've read other series that were told from the viewpoint of a cat: Midnight Louie (Carol Nelson Douglas), Mrs. Murphy (Rita Mae Brown), Joe Grey (Shirley Rousseau Murphy), to name a few, and didn't find them predictable or boring. Hare also has a lovely way with words, especially when describing landscapes. At times, it seemed like poetry. I'm sure there would have been plenty of action in the last half of the book, and the opening scene of the chase was certainly exciting, but I couldn't force myself to read more than 40%. The Goodreads description says it is good for the whole family, from age 7 and up. Yeah, age 7 to maybe-- maybe -- 12 would be a good age span for this book, and had I been reading it for that demographic I might have loved it. But, I'm not 7-12, I'm 72. (Shrug).
One thing I did like was that the author included a "Glossary of Scottish Words" at the end. Interestingly, the first word I had to look up (brock, on page 1. Page O.N.E) was not in the dictionary, and it took me about 4 internet searches to finally find an article that definitely identified a brock as another name for badger. Articles for badger kept popping up in searches for "brock," "Scottish word: brock," and others like that. What finally produced an article that linked the two was a search for "is brock another word for badger?" SMH Most of the other words I either knew or could pick up from the context. However, unless they lived somewhere where that word is used for badger regularly, I doubt many 7-yr olds would know the meaning.
So, your mileage may vary, but it's a thumbs down opinion from me.