Series: Book 2 in the Felidae series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: Fiction, Mystery
Summary
Francis the cat detective, whose first case featured in
Akif Pirinçci's international bestseller Felidae, enjoys
a comfortable bachelor existence with his human companion and
'tin-opener' Gustav, until one day disaster strikes. Gustav
is invaded by a live - in lover who aims to reform his
life-style - and his cat's. Francis decides to go on the
road, and sets out one stormy night to try his luck in the
country.
Praise for Felidae:
'A tough and unsentimental detective story told the way
cats see things. I wish my cat could read it.'
'The plot is ingenious, the movement lively ... Altogether
there is never a dull moment.'
'The most unusual thriller of the year ... Takes the prize
for black humour, too.'
'Orlando the Marmalade Cat playing Inspector Morse, with a
dash of James Bond thrown in.'
'Has all the twists and terrors of a good Ruth Rendell.'
However, perils lurk in the country too. Soon the
corpses are coming thick and fast. A serial killer is
slaughtering the farmyard cats. The strange, blind tribe of
cats who live in the sewage system, rescuing and adopting
unwanted kittens, commission Francis to bring the murderer to
justice. But who is the murderer? Are the sewer cats right to
suspect Crazy Hugo, formerly one of their number, and his
mastiff accomplice? Could the real culprit be the mysterious
creature known to Francis as Monster Paw? What about the
seductive Alcina and her family of forest-dwelling wild cats
- how are they involved? What is the true secret of the
satellite dish once tended by Diana the ecologist and her cat
the ESP enthusiast Ambrosius? And why is a human hunter out
to shoot Francis himself?
Reluctantly dabbling in the paranormal, Francis brings
his logical brain to bear on the case, until all is made
clear in a denouement with surprises to spring until the
last.
Once again, Akif Pirinçci has written a gripping
and witty crime story which at the same time faithfully
reflects feline behaviour.
- Patricia Highsmith
- Julian Symons, Sunday Times
- Mail on Sunday
- Independent on Sunday
- Country Living