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Mrs. Murphy #22

Für eine Handvoll Mäuse

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Rita Mae Brown collaborates with feline co-author Sneaky Pie Brown in a new mystery starring Mary Minor “Harry” Haristeen, the curious cat detectives Mrs. Murphy and Pewter, and Tee Tucker, the valiant crime-solving corgi. Halloween arrives early this year to rural central Virginia, when a twisted killer will stop at nothing to protect a multimillion-dollar scheme.
 
THE LITTER OF THE LAW
 
Autumn has descended and crops are being harvested all over Crozet, Virginia, ideal conditions for a scenic drive for Harry and husband Fair. Bucolic views are all well and good, but Harry’s nose for trouble leads her straight to a cornfield’s macabre scarecrow—an all too real murder victim that frightens all but the noisy crows.
 
This accountant’s gruesome death is only the first of many disturbing events in this normally pastoral corner of the world. While Harry tends her beloved grapes and sunflowers, a killer edges closer—as does Harry’s protective menagerie of animals.
 
Halloween’s approach brings with it bona fide terror and a beloved local tradition that threatens to become fatal. Rooting out the guilty in the treacherous center of a lucrative conspiracy requires Harry’s farmer’s wisdom—along with the quick wits and extraordinary senses of Sneaky Pie, Pewter, and Tucker. A vicious murderer may know the lay of the land far better than Harry does, but that’s about to change. It’s up to her vigilant four-footed companions to make sure that the unearthing of this plot is not Harry’s last act.

Praise for The Litter of the Law and the Mrs. Murphy mysteries
 
“As feline collaborators go, you couldn’t ask for better than Sneaky Pie Brown.”The New York Times Book Review
 
“Enchanting . . . Brown demonstrates once again why she’s the queen of the talking animal cozy subgenre.”Publishers Weekly
 
“As usual, the smart animals provide clues without getting in the way of the human interactions and plot. This is a strong addition to the popular series.”Booklist

Paperback

First published January 1, 2013

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About the author

Rita Mae Brown

173 books2,231 followers
Rita Mae Brown is a prolific American writer, most known for her mysteries and other novels (Rubyfruit Jungle). She is also an Emmy-nominated screenwriter.

Brown was born illegitimate in Hanover, Pennsylvania. She was raised by her biological mother's female cousin and the cousin's husband in York, Pennsylvania and later in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.

Starting in the fall of 1962, Brown attended the University of Florida at Gainesville on a scholarship. In the spring of 1964, the administrators of the racially segregated university expelled her for participating in the civil rights movement. She subsequently enrolled at Broward Community College[3] with the hope of transferring eventually to a more tolerant four-year institution.

Between fall 1964 and 1969, she lived in New York City, sometimes homeless, while attending New York University[6] where she received a degree in Classics and English. Later,[when?] she received another degree in cinematography from the New York School of Visual Arts.[citation needed] Brown received a Ph.D. in literature from Union Institute & University in 1976 and holds a doctorate in political science from the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, D.C.

Starting in 1973, Brown lived in the Hollywood Hills in Los Angeles. In 1977, she bought a farm in Charlottesville, Virginia where she still lives.[9] In 1982, a screenplay Brown wrote while living in Los Angeles, Sleepless Nights, was retitled The Slumber Party Massacre and given a limited release theatrically.

During Brown's spring 1964 semester at the University of Florida at Gainesville, she became active in the American Civil Rights Movement. Later in the 1960s, she participated in the anti-war movement, the feminist movement and the Gay Liberation movement.

Brown took an administrative position with the fledgling National Organization for Women, but resigned in January 1970 over Betty Friedan's anti-gay remarks and NOW's attempts to distance itself from lesbian organizations. She claims she played a leading role in the "Lavender Menace" zap of the Second Congress to Unite Women on May 1, 1970, which protested Friedan's remarks and the exclusion of lesbians from the women's movement.

In the early 1970s, she became a founding member of The Furies Collective, a lesbian feminist newspaper collective in Washington, DC, which held that heterosexuality was the root of all oppression.

Brown told Time magazine in 2008, "I don't believe in straight or gay. I really don't. I think we're all degrees of bisexual. There may be a few people on the extreme if it's a bell curve who really truly are gay or really truly are straight. Because nobody had ever said these things and used their real name, I suddenly became [in the late 1970s] the only lesbian in America."

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 302 reviews
Profile Image for Margaret Wilkening.
69 reviews8 followers
September 1, 2013
I really used to enjoy the Mrs. Murphy books. Rita Mae Brown’s books had a snappy story line, and the animals’ viewpoints were fresh and provided an interesting voice to the narrative. However, a number of books ago, I found that they had lost their sparkle and it took a concerted effort on my part to slog my way through. When Netgalley gave me the opportunity to read a pre-release of her newest effort, The Litter of the Law, I decided to give the series another chance.

Unfortunately, the series hadn’t improved since my last visit. The plot and characters were one dimensional. Even the animals were primarily interested in insulting each other, primarily about their weight. There were the familiar characters from past books, but there were so few new characters that after a couple were killed off, it wasn’t hard to predict who the villains were or why they were placing their victims in bazaar Halloween poses. I think the most off-putting aspect of the series is the preachy tone that Brown takes through most of the book. Whether she is expressing her views on the irritation of new comers to western Virginia or the woes of country people, she tries to put the views on characters, but the author’s voice is blaring through. I wouldn’t mind so much if it helped the narrative flow more smoothly. However, all I could hear was the blah, blah, blah in my head.

The story picked up in the last couple of chapters as the bad guys were rounded up, so I added a second star to my original evaluation.

I still enjoy Brown’s Sister Jane hunt country books, but I think it is time for Mrs. Murphy and friends to retire.
Profile Image for Jean.
1,813 reviews796 followers
May 19, 2017
This is a series I thought had finished and was surprised to find it is still on going. Rita Mae Brown and Sneaky Pie Brown write about murder in their small town of Crozet, Virginia.

Our protagonists are Mary Minor Harristeen “Harry” and tiger striped cat Mrs. Murphy. Harry had acquired a fat lazy gray cat called Pewter in earlier episodes. The Corgi Dog Tucker has to put up with the cats, it is his nose that follows the evil doers. In the earlier episodes, Harry was the postmistress but now she is married to equine vet Fair Harristeen. As this book opens they are all out for a Sunday drive in the country when they discover a scarecrow in a field is actually a dead man. This sets them off to solve the crime.

Brown nicely worked into the story information about the local Monacan Native American Tribe and its problems. I found the information about this indigenous tribe most interesting. I was unaware of all the problems Native American Tribes have to go through to be recognized by the federal or state governments. I enjoy the glimpse Brown provides of the daily life in Crozet. It is my opinion that the quality of Brown’s writing has declined from the earlier books in the series. But it was nice to meet up again with Mrs. Murphy, Pewter and Tucker.

I read this as an audiobook downloaded from Audible. The book is about seven hours long. Kate Forbes does a good job narrating the book. Forbes is an actress and audiobook narrator.
Profile Image for Laura.
1,679 reviews38 followers
July 3, 2013
Periodically while reading this book I would forget I was reading a mystery - the author talks nonstop about the environment as well as Native American rights. Both of these are noble causes, but the tone of the writing was off-putting in its preachiness. There is little suspense because the murders seem to be an afterthought.
Received thru NetGalley
Profile Image for Barbara Ann.
206 reviews42 followers
October 4, 2014
Fall is my favorite time of the year, and one way I can become immersed in the beauty of autumn is through books, vicariously experiencing the season through the story’s setting and characters. One of those novels that does exactly this is Rita Mae Brown’s The Litter of the Law. The series is set in a small rural farming community called Crozet, Virginia, which is also a real town. The Litter of the Law takes place in October and centers on the protagonist, Mary Minor Haristeen or “Harry” who finds herself caught up in solving a series of bizarre murders as Halloween approaches. However, Harry isn’t the only one doing some sleuthing. Her loyal, loving four-legged feline companions, Mrs. Murphy and Pewter, along with Tee Tucker the corgi are right there beside her, helping to find clues and providing backup in case it’s needed. This little band of quirky sidekicks provides an additional layer of amusement as readers can’t help but get caught up in their non-human, often entertaining, bickering and teasing.

This is the first book I’ve read in the series, and although it can stand alone, I think I would have enjoyed it more if I had started the series from the beginning. The author has created an entire detailed fictional community with lots of characters, townspeople, who have ongoing roles in each installment. Brown does provide a list of the “Cast of Characters” at the beginning of the book to explain each character’s connection to Harry and her family and/or their relevance to the plot. However, trying to remember who‘s who overwhelmed me at times and became a distraction from my enjoying the crux of the book: Harry’s search to discover why people are being murdered in her quiet, little close-knit community.

If I followed the series, I may have been more interested in the chit chat that occurs about various characters in the book even though they aren’t involved in this particular plot. This slowed the pacing of the story and I was bored by some of these non-relevant conversations. However, when I wasn’t distracted by these aspects of the book, I did enjoy trying to connect the clues Harry and the others discover in the scenes leading up to my favorite part of the book: the annual Halloween Hayride. The climax was suspenseful and I wasn’t completely sure who the guilty party was until an elaborate scheme is exposed. Of course, Harry and her entourage prove themselves as worthy heroes by the book’s conclusion.

Another aspect of the plot I really enjoyed is the author’s inclusion of the plight of the Monocan people, Native Americans of Virginia who had been stripped of their rights when the state of Virginia refused to officially recognize this indigenous tribe. The author incorporates their struggles into the plot smoothly and effectively, adding an additional layer of interest to the story.

If you like reading cozy mysteries, then I would recommend checking out this series because, as Brown says, “It takes a cat to write the purr-fect mystery.”

Source: I received a copy of this book from the publisher to provide an honest review.

Profile Image for Randee.
1,075 reviews37 followers
December 17, 2018
The small town of Crozet, Virginia continues to engage me with its citizens and animals. Pewter is fighting, as usual, with Tucker and Mrs. Murphy and just about anyone who displeases her by any small infraction. Pewter is my favorite character because she reminds me of every cat I've ever been enslaved by. She loves to eat and steal food, she can be very sweet when she wants to be (or wants something) and disagreeable when things aren't going her way (or if she just feels like causing a stink.) But, she is a good-heart and loves her animal and people friends even when she is being a huge pain in the ***.
1,383 reviews22 followers
September 10, 2013
I received this book from Net Galley to read and review. Up front, let me say that I have never read any books by the author before. This one was cute and flowed quite easily and smoothly from start to finish. The way the animal pets of Harry “spoke” and discovered clues in the mystery was endearing and fascinating. Too bad humans cannot really communicate with them, as it might save some time and effort (as this mystery proved). In the story, while out, Mary Minor “Harry” Haristeen and her husband Phararond “Fair” Haristeen, D.V.M, with Tee Tucker, Harry’s corgi, and cat detectives Mrs. Murphy and Pewter, discover a body posed as a dead scarecrow. Word of the crime spreads rapidly through the townsfolk, but no one in town really has a handle on who murdered the victim, and things get even more complicated when Harry and her friend Susan find another murdered victim in a witches outfit. Again, no one has a clue about who the murderer is. As the town prepares for its famous traditional Halloween scary hayride, things get even more intense, as everyone begins wondering among themselves who the murderer can be and whether this evil person is right there among them. It was interesting the way the author interwove the social problems of the one-time native Indian tribes in Virginia into the story. As I said above, the animals could help the town figure things out, but only if their humans could fully understand them, which they obviously do not. The author obviously is quite familiar with the life and customs of the Virginia area, where the story takes place, as she provides excellent, true to life descriptions of the locale, the people and their customs and culture as well as underlying political/cultural differences/problems. One thing that was off-putting, however, was the somewhat preachy tone the author used throughout the book. I was not quite sure what sort of hidden agenda she may have had, but there definitely was one. Nevertheless, the story was cute and often endearing. The animals were lovable. The characters also are realistic, though not always as well-developed as I would have liked them to be. I think the author relied on the reader having some idea of who and what they were from previous books, and, in that regard, I was at a disadvantage. I enjoyed the story, especially the added animal input. I think it is refreshing to find something that is not filled with the blood and guts of many mysteries today, and which touches on an underlying social problem without getting too political.
Profile Image for Dianne.
1,840 reviews158 followers
October 24, 2013
Gaak.





Full review coming soon


If you want to learn about crimes against indigenous tribes , organic gardening or certain types of politics instead of reading a cozy mystery, then this will be a great book for you.
I have stayed away from Ms. Browns work for a while now ever since she started taking the books into a new direction and infusing them with the authors opinions on politics, world views, religion et al.

I thought I would give this author one more try I am sorry I bothered. We are back to the rants and raves of previous books with the added thrill of the environment. Yes, I know Harry is farmer now so environmental concerns are important, but they don’t really make for an interesting cozy mystery read.

People are dying and the corpses are being arranged in gruesome and very public manners. Of course, Harry and Fair stumble accidentally on the first corpse. (Big mistake to take the postmistress job away from Harry, however that came about, it makes for weaker less believable story lines now). It takes about 60% of the novel and a thin novel it is already, for anything interesting or even resembling a clue, to happen!

I usually love the animals, but this time I found their dialogue tedious at best - plain old word filler at worse.

It was a huge struggle for me to finish this book. I used to be able to just sit there and gulp them down in one sitting, but no more. It was like being stuck in school and reading a textbook.*ARC Supplied by Publisher*

Good luck readers!
Profile Image for Rebecca.
601 reviews25 followers
August 26, 2019
Halloween is rapidly approaching in Crozet, Virginia, and Harry is right in the middle of the preparations. However, nothing can prepare her for the very human and very dead scarecrow that she finds hanging in a local field. Who was he, and why was he killed? Those questions are still being pondered when another body is found, dressed as a witch. But everyone knows this person...although peculiar and a bit of a loner, she's very much a part of the community. Harry is certain that the deaths are related, and if she can just figure out why, she will know who. The biggest question is, however, can she do it before the killer finds her. With the able assistance of her feline and canine companions, Harry dives into this very scary mystery!

Sometimes a fiction book will spark a flurry of research for me. This one did. "Paper genocide" stuck in my mind, and has led to some fascinating research on the plight of Native American tribes in their attempts to be recognized both Federally and at the State level in Virginia. I'm happy to say that the 21st century brought some measure of validation and justice to them. STILL researching and reading on this, though!
Profile Image for Jean.
882 reviews19 followers
June 23, 2014
After a long absence from the world of Mary Minor “Harry” Harristeen and her friends and family (human and animal) in Crozet, Virginia, I picked up The Litter of the Law, the 21st of the Mrs. Murphy cozy mysteries by Sneaky Pie Brown and her human co-writer, Rita Mae Brown. Harry is one of those individuals who seems to stumble upon trouble at every turn, and she is always ready to stick her nose in to get to the bottom of things. Her pets, cats Mrs. Murphy and Pewter and corgi Tee Tucker, are always beside her keeping her safe and doing a bit of investigating on their own.

In The Litter of the Law, Harry and her husband Fair discover a body posed as a scarecrow. Later, she and friend Susan find the body of Hester Martin, a rather eccentric middle-aged woman who ran a vegetable stand. Her corpse was dressed as a witch as part of a Halloween display. Harry, of course, worms her way into the investigation by asking questions of Deputy Cynthia Cooper, and her pets are with her at the grand finale to help nail the killers.

Having read most, if not all, of the Mrs. Murphy books, I found this to be less engaging than some of her previous works. The dialogue among the animals was mostly name-calling and bickering, whereas in earlier books, there was much more cooperation among them. In previous stories, also, the animals had a bigger role in solving the crimes. I have lived with cats for thirty years and at present have seven wonderful, unique felines, and I can see bits of their personalities in Mrs. Murphy and Pewter. My “fat” cat is the Queen, and I don’t think any of the others would dare taunt her about her size! (She’s also the smartest.) I can imagine that hearing this story read as an audio book would be quite amusing; however, in this case, I would much prefer the print version because Michael Gellatly's illustrations are magnificent!

I did find the themes of green living and Native American rights that were interjected into the plot to be relevant and interesting. At times, however, they seemed to detract from the mystery itself, and I felt that weakened it somewhat. Despite these few shortcomings, it was still a fun read, and I look forward to the next Sneaky Pie-Rita Mae collaboration.
Profile Image for Lily (Night Owl Book Cafe).
690 reviews494 followers
November 1, 2013
I got a copy of this book for free through Netgalley in exchange of an honest review.

Halloween is coming. While the people of Crozet, Virginia are out and preparing their beloved home for the festivities, people are suddenly found murdered and dressed up in costumes.

Eh...

A little disappointed with this book. Okay, quiet a bit disappointed with this one. I picked it up as a Halloween read because it was marked as a cozy mystery and had animals in it, and all the fun halloween stuff. Unfortunately, the book fell very short of my expectations.

First, it is suppose to be a cozy mystery but a lot of the book is oddly filled with what seems to be filler material. For one, 50% of the book had nothing to do with the murder mystery but everything with the events of the town life and it seems to be filled with what seems like useless facts. Seriously... There is a bunch of times in the book where it pretty much said “Did you know....” I felt like I was being lectured on stuff the entire book. Yes, some of these “facts” might be important stuff that's going on in the world that people might overlook, but I don't feel like it should belong in a cozy mystery book. It derailed the story, made it sound very preachy, and made it really hard to continue reading.

I managed to clench my teeth and get through it, but it was a very odd feeling. I have to admit, I almost didn't mind the talking animal's in the story because of it. Of course the human's don't understand them, but that was odd indeed.

This was my first Mrs.Murphy mystery and I am going to have to make it my last. It might sound harsh, but the facts and lecture or preaching whatever you want to call it did nothing but ruin the book for me. Unfortunately, I had a hard time with the writing style. Which is a shame really. I am really sorry if this review sounded a bit harsh, I think the worse I have posted in a while.

Profile Image for Lis Carey.
2,213 reviews137 followers
August 2, 2013
Mary Minor "Harry" Haristeen and her husband, Fair, are out with their dog, Tee Tucker, and their cats, Mrs. Murphy and Pewter, when the animals find a very interesting scarecrow, apparently being torn apart by crows.

Why would crows be attacking a scarecrow?

It's a corpse. His name was Josh Hill, and he was shot through the heart before being dressed as a scarecrow and hung up in the field. It's the start of a frightening October, building toward Halloween and the annual hayride to raise money for the Crozet Library.

Tee Tucker, Mrs. Murphy, and the often reluctant Pewter need to keep a close eye on their favorite human, Harry, as well as doing (in their minds) all the real investigation of this shocking crime.

When Harry and her friend Susan find another corpse, this one dressed up as a witch and inserted into the Halloween display on the lawn of a local church, everyone starts to get alarmed, and Harry, Susan, and their sheriff's deputy friend Coop begin to wonder who it is among their friends and neighbors that's killing their neighbors.

Harry Haristeen is always fun to read about, though of course Tucker, Mrs. Murphy, and Pewter are the real stars of the series. This is a nicely plotted mystery, a visit with old friends, and a pleasant evening read as Halloween approaches. The Virginia boosterism can at times seem a bit smug and a bit much, but I assume most people feel the same way about their part of the country. Indeed, I feel sorry for them if they don't.

Recommended.

I received a free electronic galley of this book from the publisher via NetGalley.
Profile Image for M.L.D..
Author 27 books25 followers
September 18, 2017
There is some laughably bad dialogue in this, moments where I looked up from the page and said, "People don't talk like this." I realize that the author was trying desperately to keep new readers up to speed with a large cast of characters, but still. There are good ways and bad ways to do this, and the author/editor went with laughably bad, stilted, and unnatural.

Another downside: with a cozy of this style, set in a small town with a sprawling cast of regulars, it's pretty easy to determine which characters are untouchable, ie won't be either victims or murderers...leaving a very small pool from which to pull both corpses and perps. Which means: not much mystery here.
Profile Image for Leslie.
135 reviews1 follower
October 22, 2023
This is #22 in the series and I liked how the other books were small town murder but Harry and her pets were actively searching for cluse/trying to solve the murder along with the small town conversations. This one had political talk about climate change which is an important issue to talk about and I wouldn't have minded it so much if they had been sleuthing as well. Also didn't care for all the fat shaming of the one cat and the neighbor Buddy. I felt the ending was abrupt as well. Also would have liked more Halloween instead of at the end.
77 reviews6 followers
April 2, 2024
This was my first book i read in the series. I absolutely loved the banter and remarks between Mrs Murphy, Tucker and Pewter and all the other animal friends on the story. However I was not interested in the detailed history of the Indian tribes, the environment and the land acquisition of properties. The search for the murderer was second to all the background info. After reading other reviews, I think I should try one of the earlier books in the series.
Profile Image for EB Hooyer.
125 reviews
October 13, 2025
A fun cozy mystery, especially for animal lovers. Not world-changing, but not bad.
14 reviews
October 27, 2025
i 100% agree that all the animals involved deserve a medal of honor.
Profile Image for Debra Scott.
294 reviews4 followers
May 27, 2019
Very little mystery. Mostly politics. I need a break from Rita Mae for a bit I think.
Profile Image for Maddie.
44 reviews
October 20, 2025
Straight up bureaucratic mystery novel…..even fat shaming talking animals could not save a book that is 10% murder mystery and 90% discussion of farming and finances
Profile Image for ☺Trish.
1,387 reviews
February 4, 2023
I read a few of Rita Mae Brown's early Mrs. Murphy mysteries and found them to be relatively enjoyable (although, for me, a few had definite issues).
In The Litter of the Law Harry and crew investigate a couple of murders . . . and get themselves into all kinds of danger, as usual.
To paraphrase: Money is the root of much evil.
419 reviews1 follower
July 17, 2019
Rita Mae Brown is a terrible writer. In fact, I vowed never to read any more of her books several years ago when one of them turned out to be a screed against Obamacare masquerading as one of those Harry Hairsteen books. Quite a few of her readers must have felt that way because she included a foreword in her next book saying that she wasn't Harry, or Harry wasn't her and people in rural Virginia were fiercely independent blah blah.
The point is, I should have stuck to my guns on this and not used my valuable reading time on this stupid book with highly improbable murders and dumb dialog. So why did I? I wanted something to read on my phone. I do like some but not much of her descriptions of the seasons in rural Virginia. But come on. Even the corgi in this book is not much of a character, and the conflict between the cats has gotten old.
Here's the plot. The Crozet library is putting on a fundraiser at Halloween, the Halloween Horror Hayride, which involves enough logistics to require the Seventh Cavalry to plan and staff it, but hey, the fiercely independent and devoted to the library citizens of Crozet pull it off every year. A couple of weeks before Halloween, good old Harry is driving her truck (make, model, year and engine noise supplied here) past a field, and notices something odd about the scarecrow. Sure enough, it's a dead Crozet citizen, dressed as a scarecrow.
In between descriptions of frosty pumpkins and fiercely independent produce stand managers, more Crozet citizens are found dressed up and dead until finally Harry figures out what's going on, and solves the mystery with the help of the cats and the corgi. Yawn. As I said, don't waste your time.
Profile Image for Alyssa.
313 reviews5 followers
January 15, 2014
I received this book for free through Goodreads First Reads. I have never read a book by this author before, so perhaps avid readers of these books can take my review with a grain of salt.

Personally, this book was not a good introduction to Rita Mae Brown's books.

Sure, for a mystery book, there were a lot of head scratching moments...but in a bad way. The animal dialogue is really cheesy and served no real purpose. The animals did nothing to help solve the mystery (which I was expecting), and instead they just bickered all the time. The characters in this book were ridiculous caricatures. They often talked about random things that had nothing to do with the mystery at hand. At certain parts of the book I thought they forgot about the mystery all together.

At first I thought maybe this book was written in a style to read out loud to kids, but the contents of the book is so rife with heavily complicated issues which renders it not kid-friendly at all.

So who was this book written for? Probably for Rita Mae Brown herself. The book seemed like a vehicle to insert herself as the hero and show off all of the knowledge she has on various topics.

Profile Image for Ricki.
816 reviews8 followers
November 22, 2013
In a word...disappointing. I've been reading the Rita Mae Brown/Sneaky Pie books since the first one was published and have always thought of her as one of my favorite authors. I've read several of her other books as well, including Bingo, Venus Envy, Riding Shotgun, Rita Will, the Sister Jane series and more, but Harry and the animals have always been my favorites.
Well, Ms Brown seems to have hit a bump in the road with this book in the series, as well of some of the previous ones. Out of the last 5 books, I would have to say that (maybe) only one was up to her previous standards.Perhaps it's time to take off a year or so to renew her interest in the characters, 'cause it doesn't seem to be there anymore. She is such a skilled, creative writer, I hate to see this happening.
I will continue to buy the books because I won't give up hope that Harry and the animals and all the characters will come roaring back, just like the old days.
Profile Image for Luanne Clark.
664 reviews2 followers
March 6, 2019
Oh Rita Mae, you are showing your age. You are becoming a curmudgeonly old woman. Every second page includes a diatribe about the evils of government. And why do you have to explain farming practices to me? I don’t care about rust and rainfall and which harrow to use. I just want a cozy mystery. Speaking of, your community of characters has grown so large that any new characters are either a victim or the murderer. And it only takes about 10 chapters to figure out which is which. And one more thing, Rita: your animals used to be warm and cute and added some whimsy to the franchise. Lately they have become so snarky with each other that they’ve lost their appeal. Dog hating cats, cats intimidating the dog, and cats just super-bitchy in general. Will I read the next installment? Probably. Curse you, Rita Mae Brown. Why can’t I quit this series?
Profile Image for Mayda.
3,812 reviews64 followers
December 30, 2013
While the town is busy getting ready for Halloween festivities, someone is staging some rather gruesome murders. The interaction between Harry’s animals is always entertaining but this installment the series falls a bit short of expectations. I guess when you are a successful author, you can make your novels into a statement to raise social consciousness, but that is not the reason most mystery lovers read cozies. Brown has used this tale to expose the federal government’s refusal to acknowledge the Virginia Indian tribes. This may be a worthwhile cause to support, but its inclusion in the story adds little to the storyline. Too much like a lecture and not enough of the regular characters, especially the animals.
Profile Image for Yvensong.
913 reviews53 followers
July 8, 2016
Not my favorite of the Mrs. Murphy Mysteries, but it was an enjoyable way to pass my time while on a road trip. I enjoy these little, light mysteries as a break from the horror and darker paranormal books I tend to favor, and this one was perfect for my mood.
Profile Image for Lesezeichenfee.
510 reviews5 followers
October 8, 2021
Rita Mae Brown und Sneaky Pie Brown Für eine Handvoll Mäuse Ein Fall für Mrs. Murphy Ullstein 2016

Bye, bye – I will miss you

In diesem Buch geht es um Ackerbau, um die Kritik an der amerikanischen Bundesregierung (Ackerbau, Ureinwohner (Indianer darf man ja nicht mehr sagen!) und noch einiges andere mehr), außerdem ein Halloween wie das nur Amerikaner feiern können und dazu ein paar Morde. Mrs. Murphy, Tucker und Pewter dürfen auch mitmachen.

Sagen wir es so, die Luft ist raus. Rita Mae Brown fällt nichts mehr ein, (bzw. sie legt mehr Wert auf Ackerbau und Regierungskritik wie auf die zwei Katzen und ein Hund. Die Prioritäten sind total verschoben. Der Krimi ist in den Hintergrund geraten und da das Wissen mit kritischem Zeigefinger vermittelt wird, klingt es mehr nach Besserwisserei, als nach „Lesevergnügen“.) und hat wahrscheinlich deshalb auch ihre andere Serie begonnen. Nur leider gefällt mir nur die Serie um Sneaky Pie. Es ist nur noch was für Hardcore Fans. Leider.

Der Schreibstil ist wirklich – wie immer – sehr gut. Die Kritik über Ackerbau und Ureinwohner kommt als Besserwisserei rüber und nicht mehr als Wissen. Wer interessiert sich in Deutschland für so wahnsinnig viel amerikanische Geschichte? Ich nicht. Die Charaktere sind seltsam. In diesem Buch habe ich mich mal wieder gefragt, wie schon im letzten Band, warum sind Susan und Harry nur Freunde? Eigentlich müssten sie ein „Paar“ sein. Das wäre authentisch und würde besser passen. Damit hätte die Autorin die Serie vielleicht noch retten können. Es ist halt auch kein Krimi mehr, nur noch ein Roman und der Kriminalfall spielt mehr im Hintergrund, finde ich.

Spannung ist Fehlanzeige und das Highlight ist einfach zu kompliziert. Wer kommt denn da noch mit? Mir war das Highlight-hin-und-her zu verworren. Zumal mir schon vorher klar war, wer der Täter ist. (Für mich kamen eh nur zwei in Frage) Wie schon gesagt, hier kommen mir die Tiere ermittlerisch zu kurz, und auch so, sie werden zu Statisten degradiert, aber hier sind sie ja noch da. Während beim letzten Band: Die Maus zum Gärtner machen sind sie noch mehr Statisten.

Mein – Lesezeichenfees – Fazit:
Ich liebe die Serie, aber ich verstehe, warum sie – mehr oder weniger - beendet ist. Trotzdem eine Empfehlung für alle Fans und Nichtfans. Lest alle Bücher auf ein Mal. Dann fällt es nicht so auf.

PS: Es gibt noch drei Bände auf amerikanisch. Aber da der Ullsteinverlag so – sagen wir mal: zögerlich – beim rausbringen ist, wird es wohl keinen mehr interessieren, zumal das letzte schon nicht so toll war. Ok, ich würde es wieder kaufen! Und ich hab bisher jedes Buch der Serie gekauft, wie bei „Stephanie Plum“ von Janet Evanovich.
Profile Image for Kathryn.
990 reviews46 followers
January 11, 2025
This book is the Twenty-Second in the series featuring Mrs. Murphy, a Grey tiger short-hair cat who, along with a Welsh corgi dog named Tee Tucker, and the stout grey cat Pewter, solves mysteries with the assistance of Mary Minor “Harry” Haristeen, a farmer married to Fair Haristeen, an equine veterinarian, outside the small town of Crozet, Virginia, some ten miles west of Charlottesville. (It should be noted that all animals can talk to each other, and that they all understand humans, but humans, being dense imperfect beings, cannot understand the animals.) And these are fun mysteries to read.

It is a Saturday in Early October, and Fair and Harry have stolen a day from their respective occupations to drive through the countryside with the animals. After a stop at Hester Martin’s vegetable and fruit stand (she only buys from those who use natural fertilizers on their crops or orchards), where Harry visits with huge fellow farmer Buddy Janns , they stop by a cornfield to discipline the animals, and the animals head towards the scarecrow in the middle of the field. That is when Fair and Harry find that the scarecrow is (or was) a real person. Hester is also devoted to the preservation of Random Row, the schoolhouses built in the early 1900s for the colored children of the county (which at that time included Native American children). And she wants the local library to be adequately supported, and with architect Tazio Chappars has been organizing the Halloween Hayride for later in the month, a hayride going past active Halloween tableaus. After the Lutheran vestry meeting (with Harry, her friends Susan and BoomBoom, Neil Jordan (who runs a fertilizer business), Wesley Speer (an upscale realtor), and the Reverend), Susan and Harry discover that the Halloween display at the nearby Catholic Church includes a witch – which used to be the alive Hester Martin. Harry thus involves herself in the two murders, trying to work through a web of mystery that includes Native American land rights, and the animals once again pledge themselves to keep her from being part of another Halloween display.

This was yet again another good mystery in the series, and I will soon begin reading the next in the series. (I did not read the twenty-first novel, Sneaky Pie for President, because according to Wikipedia it is not a Mrs. Murphy Mystery.)
Profile Image for Lindsey.
175 reviews5 followers
December 18, 2019
These cozy mysteries continue to bring me joy and comfort, and I adore them. This installment features a horrific murder of a man named Josh Hill, who is then dressed up like a scarecrow and displayed in a Halloween creche outside in a field. Harry Haristeen, who discovers the body with her husband Fair and their two cats and dog, sets out to solve the mystery before another neighbor is victimized. Along the way, Harry discovers a disturbing turn of history in which a man in the early 1900s committed "paper genocide" by changing the nationality on paperwork of every Native American in the area he could, thus leaving present-day Native Americans without proper paperwork to prove their lineage and thus get any official government recognition.

These books are so fun because the mysteries themselves are somewhat cheesy and the dynamic between the humans and animals are lighthearted and endearing, and yet there is a serious undertone to this story. It ties to real-life paper genocide committed against the Native Americans, because physical genocide at the hands of the colonists wasn't enough, apparently. I wish more people learned about the atrocities that were taken against the native people when the colonists invaded, because it's so important but almost no history books detail the facts. In this story, as in all of the Mrs. Murphy mysteries, Rita Mae and Sneaky Pie Brown mix in philosophies and life lessons among the chapters, and this story sheds light on the epidemic of people worshiping money and power instead of focusing on people and generosity, and the damage such attitudes can cause. Sappy as they can be, these books make me feel better when I'm having a rough day, and make me want to be a kinder person to other people and to continue helping animals through volunteer work and charitable donations.

This is a super-cute entry in the series, and any fan of the books will enjoy it like I did.
Profile Image for Kat Lebo.
855 reviews15 followers
November 9, 2013
The Litter of the Law
By Rita Mae Brown & Sneaky Pie Brown
A Mrs. Murphy Mystery


Rita Mae Brown is a prolific author, having authored 8 books in the Sister Jane Arnold series, 2 in the Mags Rogers series, this Mrs. Murphy series, plus several other fiction and non-fiction works.

Rita Mae Brown’s Mrs. Murphy mysteries are always fun. I have all but one of the Mrs. Murphy books – all of the fiction, but I didn’t purchase the Cook Book. This is the 22nd novel in the series. By now, I almost feel like Brown’s characters, both animal and human, are a part of my family.

There is a lot to like about this series. The reader will run across few editing/proofing mistakes, although the occasional ones pop up. There are lots of returning characters, all either animal or human residents of Crozet, Virginia, and who by now feel like old friends. Brown usually tackles important issues in the books; this one tackles the lack of federal recognition of Virginia’s Native American tribes, as well as the ages old struggle between working good farm land or selling it for residence or business use. Brown can write some pretty spectacular prose, such as this example, which is the first paragraph of Chapter 28:

“Halloween colors, orange and black, gave way to shimmering slate on Thursday night as twilight fell over the rolling Virginia countryside. Those trees without leaves appeared outlined in charcoal, and the conifers swayed blue and silver. The pin oaks, dried leaves till attached, rustled in the light breeze. When the wind lifted their leaves upward, the pale underside contrasted with the tree’s dark bark. Then as the wind died down, they turned right side up.”

In this novel, Brown’s main human character, Mary Minor “Harry” Haristeen, and her husband, Phararond (“Fair”), discover an unusual scarecrow made of a human body. Soon after, another body is discovered disguised as a witch in a Halloween display. Who is killing these Crozet residents, and why? In a novel spliced with agri-lore, Virginia history, and the struggle to preserve historical lands and places, Brown paces her novel with precision and dash, leading the reader ever onward in a desperate attempt to find the person or persons responsible for the murders, and to protect Harry’s friends and family. Her climactic action scene is fast-paced and interesting, bringing the final show-down to a satisfying conclusion. Brown’s characters are, by this far along in the series, very well fleshed out. Even the non-human characters are well known to those who have followed the series. Not only Mrs. Murphy, a cool tiger cat, Tee Tucker, and feisty corgi, and Pewter, the couch-potato feline, but also recurring characters such as Simon, the opossum who lives in Harry’s hayloft, alongside Matilda, the blacksnake, and Flatface, the great horned owl. And who doesn’t love Lucy Fur, one of the Lutheran minister’s cats?

Yes, the animals in the novel talk. But unlike the cats in the Joe Grey mysteries, these animals only talk to each other, not to humans. Readers get the story through the viewpoint of the animals (often a more expansive viewpoint than that of the humans) and the human characters, as well.

So, what’s not to like? There are a couple of things that bother me about Brown’s writing. I’m not a big fan of extravagant verbal identifiers. ‘He said’ and ‘she said’ are good enough for me. I mean, how many times does she need to describe the character as part of the dialogue, as here, on page 23: “….the cat replied as the attractive forty-one-year-old woman returned to her task.” First, remember I said the animals in the story couldn’t converse with humans, so what the cat said wasn’t understood by Harry. Second, do I need to know Harry’s age? I don’t think it’s particularly important to this dialogue, nor do I think her being described as “attractive” is necessary. If the author wants to put these two things in the story, a better place might be in describing her as she is getting ready to go to one of the events, or mentioning it in relation to how another person (human) sees her. Also, she often uses the same words to describe multiple characters. A little later in the story, as Harry is speaking, her own dialogue is described as “…said the attractive woman…” and also uses similar wordage to describe another character “The attractive police officer shook her head.” I’m not sure what exactly bothers me about this. Perhaps it’s because so often any dialogue is full of modifiers describing action that I should have been able to infer from the context: so and so shouted, so and so teased, so and so sighed, so and so smiled, so and so insulted. Maybe it seems overly simple to my eye. Whatever it is about the way Brown uses modifying language with her dialogue, it leaves me feeling like she’s talking down to the reader, over explaining because she doesn’t believe the reader capable of making correct inferences. One instance of that can be found on page 999:

“”Harry, did you see where the USDA” – he used the initials for the United States Department of Agriculture – “predicts the drought reduced our economic growth by almost half a percentage point?...” Umm, I know what USDA stands for, thank you, especially when the entire dialogue revolves around farming!

Or maybe it’s just that the wording often feels awkward to me. I can’t quite put my finger on the reason, I just know it bugs me. I attempt to read over the top of it, but I always notice it.

Another problem – and this isn’t just Brown’s problem, but the problem a lot of authors of series novels run into – is bringing in new or previously minor characters in order to have someone to kill off. In this story, both the murder victims were characters who had not appeared in former books in the series, or, if they did appear, weren’t prominently enough featured to be remembered. I realize that killing off ones major characters isn’t the best idea, but after 22 books, as soon as a new character is introduced, one begins to wonder when that character will get killed. I liken it to the Star Trek “red shirt” syndrome.

Nevertheless, I still look forward to each new adventure and will undoubtedly pre-order the next in the series, “Nine Lives To Die,” which is due out in June of 2014.

Profile Image for Darlene.
1,965 reviews219 followers
June 24, 2018
I was given this book by a friend who read it on her vacation and left it with me when she visited. It took me so long as the font is rather small so I could only take it in bits and pieces. There was enough dialogue to break up the page so I could read it in tiny doses.

The book kept my interest. I did want to find out more about the farming and life of these farm people. I loved reading about the characters. I found the Native American research interesting though it added to the shame of how our founders dealt with the original inhabitants of our country.

I absolutely loved the drawings. Yay for adult books that have pictures!

What I found annoying and distracting from the story: talking animals. But I suppose that is where the 'cozy' comes in for this mystery.

I love Halloween but I never go to 'haunted house' features because I worry that real blood could be involved with no one knowing. And I hate things jumping out at me to make me scream or be startled. This book just reinforced those fears. It is what made this a gruesome mystery rather than cozy. But others of you may love it and can read it with the grain of salt that is implied. I'm glad to finally be finished and to pass it to the friends of the library.
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