I am really not a fan of books with talking animals. I just have a lot of trouble with anthropomorthizing animals-- and that is the whole premise of Murphy's Joe Grey Mystery Series.
Joe Grey is a "speaking cat" who lives with several other like-gifted cats in the small town of Molena Point in coastal northern California. Only a few people in this community know about this cat family's rare gift, and they are dedicated to keep the cats' secret.
The secret is threatened by the discovery of a book about speaking cats buried with a dead body in the ancestral home of the family that first brought this cat family line from Wales. The cats with their current people have to come up with a plan to get the body discovered after they have dragged away the offensive volume and without revealing the unusual talents of this family of cats. Since no one in the police department is privy to the secret about the cats it is a matter of getting the police to find the body without becoming suspicious about the cats.
The other thread is the "love" story between a feral "speaking cat," Sage, and his half-feral litter mate, Kit. Kit ultimately decides to stay with her people rather than to go back to the hard life of a wild cat. I find this relationship too filled with sentimentality and anthropomorphic for my tastes.
There are sections of the book that are exciting and attention-grabbing, in particular the chase of the suspect (there's no surprise about who that is) and the clever way the animals and their people use to get the police to find the dead body in the Pamillion ruins.
This book will appeal to mystery lovers who enjoy animal characters and can suspend disbelief a bit in terms of what the animals think, say and do.
Liz Nichols
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