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Claws for Concern: Book 3 of Fred, Joe, Kitkit, Cat, & Co.

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Two dogs, two cats, two large humans, and one small that's quite a household for one small kitten, still trying to work out if growing up is worth the effort. She's going to learn about rain and snow; tinsel and treasure; toy cats, real cats, old-cats, and wild cats in this volume of short stories. And she'll explore the mysteries of those variously-sized black boxes, so beloved of her humans.

119 pages, Kindle Edition

Published November 19, 2021

14 people want to read

About the author

Sheila Deeth

85 books190 followers
Sheila Deeth is an English American, Catholic Protestant, mathematician writer and editor, author of contemporary novels - Divide by Zero and Infinite Sum from Indigo Sea Press - the Five Minute Bible Story Series from Cape Arago Press, Tails of Mystery from Linkville Press, and several spiritual speculative novellas and short stories.

Sheila is a prolific reader and her book reviews are published on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Powells, Goodreads, and Librarything, as well as on her blog at http://sheiladeeth.blogspot.com

Find out more at http://about.me/sheiladeeth

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Author 18 books42 followers
December 4, 2021
A collection of cute stories focused on a kitten named Kitkit and her quotidian home life. Her family includes three humans as well as her mother cat and two dogs who have been written about in their own books, including "Tails of Mystery."

Since Kitkit's home includes humans, her vocabulary is an interesting one that sometimes needs decoding. The home contains such items as the rain room, food room, car room, child's cage without a top, fur for human child's paws, black boxes of all kinds-- some that flash colorful pictures, others that can be carried in pockets and yelled at. The man's cylinder from the cold-cupboard (a favorite toy of his.) One item that took a while to decode was the "wing-wing place." It's also where the "lide-lide" lives.

Kitkit has many adventures but an overriding concern seems to be whether to remain a kitten forever or become "old." My favorite story is near the end, "Kitkit's Christmas Treat." It seems that Christmas introduces much strangeness into the household, including planting a tree in the living room, lights that resemble fireflies around the windows, and vines, berries, and leaves covering the black boxes, plus annoying caterwauling music everywhere.

This chapter and the following epilogue introduce new characters into the household.
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