"Of course I worry.What if the cops witness a cat opening a skylight andmasterminding a robbery?The tabloids will love it."
There's a new pair of thieves in Molena Point, California, a renegade yellow-eyed-tom-cat with a cold disdain for the law,and a scruffy human partner who is no better. The two, clever and silent at their work, are bad news indeed to crime-solving cats Joe Grey and Dulcie. But when Joe learns the pair's connection to a good friend, and then an innocent couple turns up dead in the library garden, Joe and Dulcie must engage in some fancy paw work to unmask the deceptions and route the real killer -- before his brazen criminal crime spree careens madly toward them.
Shirley Rousseau Murphy is the author of over 40 books, including 24 novels for adults, the Dragonbards Trilogy and more for young adults, and many books for children. She is best known for her Joe Grey cat mystery series, consisting of 21 novels, the last of which was published when she was over 90. Now retired, she enjoys hearing from readers who write to her at her website www.srmurphy.com, where the reading order of the books in that series can be found.
Murphy grew up in southern California, riding and showing the horses her father trained. After attending the San Francisco Art institute she worked as an interior designer, and later exhibited paintings and welded metal sculpture in the West Coast juried shows. "When my husband Pat and I moved to Panama for a four-year tour in his position with the U. S . Courts, I put away the paints and welding torches, and began to write," she says. Later they lived in Oregon, then Georgia, before moving to California, where she now enjoys the sea and views of the Carmel hills. .
Dulcie & Mavity are featured in the 4th book of the Joe Grey tales. Dulcie's role as the library cat is challenged. Azreal, a black cat with evil tendencies enters the story. He tempts Dulcie with stories of voodoo and dark jungles. Joe & Dulcie watch Azreal & his human partner Greeley burglarized several stores. They recognized that Azreal is able to speak like them. Only to learned Greenly is Mavity's brother. Another super story.
These are such good mysteries and I love how the author blends in real feline antics to the stories. Same great main characters. Such good palet refreshers in between heavyweight reads. Wonderful adventure cozies.
This fourth entry in the Joe Grey series is a mystery featuring amateur sleuths Joe Grey and Dulcie, two sentient cats who are more than best friends. I think this entry has a line going through it about love, or lack of love, and the various kinds of love. Joe Grey and Dulcie are very much in love and spend as much of their time together as possible. They love to investigate crimes. They must do so carefully since they don’t want to reveal their special abilities of speech and reading. Sound too far gone and unbelievable? Not so in Mrs. Murphy’s skilled hands or in Susan Boyce’s proficient narration.
Wilma’s niece Charlie’s new Clean it, Fix it business was doing well. Under the cats’ silent supervision, she had two employees to whom she was delegating the cleaning and minor repairs – Mavity and Pearl Ann -- while Charlie did the heavier fixing. Both are working at an investment guru’s place who works by computer at home. Pearl Ann just loves what he does with the little bit of money she’s given him to invest, until later when she discovers what he’s actually done with it.
When Mavity disappears, no one knows why or where. The town searches for her until finally a woman is found unconscious in the back seat of her car which has apparently hit a lamp post. Mavity’s worst wound came from a screw driver hitting her, not the car accident, and she has temporarily lost her memory. She is taken to the hospital where she is quickly identified. Afterward Wilma takes Mavity into her home to help her regain her memory. Dulcie comforts Mavity and gathers clues.
Mavity’s brother Greely is in town on a visit, only he has rented a store room as the only place he could find to rent and get drunk. He has an all black cat named Azrael who is evil. He and the other cats do not get along and actually enter several fights. Azrael is also sentient and cruel. He enjoys scaring Dulcie. He actually jumps to attack Mavity, but Dulcie jumps to stop him, and they fight until he runs off.
One action that makes this story explode is made by the investor. He had his doubts about Pearl Ann. Via Dulcie and Joe Grey, we know that Pearl Ann had entered his home with the key she had to clean with, and spent many hours on his computer. He supposedly leaves his home for a short trip, but he hides his car a few blocks away and returns home quietly to find Pearl Ann working on his computer. What follows is rather nasty!
When we finally reach the end when humans and cats all share a picnic, we again visit family ties and how family interacts with each other and outsiders. A few humans leave Molena Point with the possibility of return one day. Molena Point is the better for it.
Once again, I spend a delightful few hours traipsing through the impossibly quaint Molena Point with talking cat detectives, and then I give the book away because it's not worth owning for another read. In this (the fourth Joe Grey mystery, I believe), a new cat is introduced, and it is kind of nice to have the change of pace of whole scenes without humans in them that aren't just the flirtations of Joe and Dulcie. The introduction of jealousy was fun, too, in terms of not only underscoring how human the character of Dulcie is, but being able to get into all of the intricate little habits that cats have when they're honked off at each other. I will say this about Murphy, she has cat mannerisms pegged. But so much of this story felt invented (which you shouldn't actually notice in fiction, and the woman never met a simile she didn't like. Quite evocative imagery, sometimes, but when the page has more "like"s than Facebook, it's time to break out a metaphor or something. As usual, a good distraction and pleasant read.
I wonder if the author hates fat people, as a couple of semi-important characters from Georgia or 'bouts are introduced to us as being rather portly and then, in practically every single other scene from there on, we are reminded that they are fat, gluttonous people, the author making sure to frame each description as negatively as possible. We're given little else to feel about them, even though they do have actual agendas besides being fat, but we take away, at the end of the book, that they were fat people.
The actual mystery itself was pretty damn mediocre. There are more interesting books in this series.
I am slowly working my way through the series and love each one. Sometimes they can be a worry or a challenge - why? Because I worry about the cats, the danger, and sometimes the really sinister characters they encounter. The world that Shirley Rousseau Murphy has created slowly develops book by book, and the magic of Molena Point weaves its spell as you curl up and enter the world of Joe Grey and his feline friends.
I am addicted to Joe Grey and Dulcie and now the Kit...the books get better and better and I intend to read each and every one. Joe and his relationship with his human room mate Clyde can be rocky at times,but there is (dare I say it?)love between the two which creeps in amidst the fussing and feuding over Joe's propensity for getting involved on police matters. Yes. I admit it. I love Joe Grey.
You just can't beat talking kitties! The murder mystery part of the story was alright, not stellar but good enough...but I just love Dulcie and Joe. Definitely going to be looking up some more in this series.
This was my least favorite of the first 4 I've read. Maybe it touched on a little too much reality with fraud, scams and using people. I'll read another, but hope they're not on a darker course. I read these for an escape. I mean, really, they're talking cats!! Who needs realism?
There are a lot of new Characters in this book, some evil, some criminally rotten and of course the pet detectives. Charlie, Wilma's niece, has her own business, "Charlie's Fix-It, Clean-It". She is worried about Clyde's new project, he bought a run-down apartment complex, and Charlie was feeling overwhelmed with the plumbing and electrical wiring needing to be fixed. Plus it was a lot more work than what her business was about. But she does have a good worker, Mavity, she is a great cleaner and very dependable. She has a new employee that does the electrical and plumbing repairs. But Mavity is having family at her house and she is preoccupied and late and getting worn down. But she thinks it may all work out, so why is she worrying? Then the only tenant gets murdered and Mavity disappears, so the police thinks she might be the murderer. After a lot of cat sleuthing, the murder starts to come together, but Dulcie has to wait for an unwanted guest to get off the phone. And when she finally gets the Police Chief on the line, she tells most of news she found about the murder and she thinks someone is out to get her and she yowls and Clyde hears her and runs to save her . The chief was stuck on the phone with no answers. But guess what you'll have to read the book to find out
Another great book in the Joe Grey series. Imagine how many crimes the police could solve if they could use the senses and instincts of cats! Still good mysteries and new characters. The talking, crime-solving cats continue to entertain. I can imagine my cats being excited about hunting their prey and being disgusted by humans, dogs and any one else they deem beneath them. I hope someone turns these books into a series at some point. It seems like more people are going to be let in on the cat's secret soon. Too many unexplained events happen when the cats are around and people are starting to notice.
I have been slowly reading through this cozy mystery series with anthropomorphism - reading, talking, using the phone... lol. They are strange and cute and the mystery part is pretty good. It seems that almost every year for the past few there have been prompts in my challenges that fit these books well. I have gotten to like the cats, and their owners, and the police that try to solve these crimes and are uncomfortable with the cats that seem to be around too often when crimes are happening.
Another mystery solved with the help of a mysterious voice on the phone? This book introduced more intrigue to the fantasy aspect of this storyline. Can cats tell the future? Can they change the course of events with this power? When visitors come to town, Dulcie and Joe begin having run-ins with a cat like themselves though somehow different. While exploring the mysteries he brings with him, another mystery unfolds that leads to murder. Soon they find themselves dropping hints to the local sheriff and searching for clues to protect those they love...
- Weirdly obsessive fat-phobia (it's one thing to describe people very negatively as fat/gluttonous, but eventually after several scenes where they were just being described in the same ways and in the same negative, mocking light, I wanted to shout at the book, "we get it! They're fat!" - Murderer was a man in a dress. - Black cat character is evil and into evil voodoo.
All old annoying cliches that I'm extremely not into. I'd liked the other books in this series, but this one was not at all for me.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Talking cats investigate mysterious events, including murder, in a quaint sea-side California town. One talking cat lives with an ex-PI-turned librarian. The other talking cat lives with an antique car expert/apartment house developer. The tips and clues these felines convey lead the local constabulary to suspect something unusual is afoot, or should I say a-paw?
This was very good. I liked all the intrigue and a few twists at the end. Was a bit surprised that the murder didn't happen until about 60% in. One plot point was left open at the end, so I'm thinking it will continue or make an appearance in a future book. Still love Joe and Dulcie. I would love it if my cats could talk, although that might be a bad thing! XD
3.5⭐️ Such a fun way to write a murder mystery! I live the concept of having cats solve a mystery. Definitely fun and can see myself reading more.
I kinda had to rush this because my Libby time was almost up. I feel like I would have given 4 had I not waiting. That’s my bad. I’ll probably re-pick it up again!
I expected a rather silly book somewhat like the others I've read but this one was great! Joe Grey and Dulcie are of an ancient breed of cat who can speak to humans and can hide basically in plain sight all the while listening in. When a 3rd cat of their breed comes to town with his criminal human, Joe and Dulcie are the only ones who can solve the mystery.
This is #4 in the Joe Grey series, and my favorite so far! A new tomcat comes to town, upsetting the feline balance of things. I love that the cat drama is mirrored by the human drama. The mystery is compelling and not too predictable.
What an absolutely delightful tale! I am totally taken by the stories of these two cats and the things they have been getting into. I find the books, on audio, just a fun and imaginative escape! For anyone who is a cat lover, I highly recommend this series!
I loved the introduction of new characters, specially of Azrael. I hope we see more of him. I wonder who will be let in the cats secret on the next book. This mystery was very engaging!
The most curious thing to me is that the image of the two main story cats on the cover to not match the description within the pages of the book. Still, I enjoy the relationships, the tour of the town, the detailed description of the library, and the intrigue.