Doubleday Large Print Home Library EditionRita Mae Brown's latest mystery
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
25 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Only for series loyalists,
By bookstealth "bookstealth" (Northern Illinois) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cat's Eyewitness (Mrs. Murphy Mysteries) (Hardcover)
Before anyone gets upset, I enjoyed this series a lot which is probably why I had higher expectations for the latest entry. Cat's Eyewitness isn't bad, it just isn't very good either. My benchmark tends to be whether a title could attract new readers as well as hold established ones. This book wouldn't do it.Much of the focus is on what happens in the life of series regulars. A lot happens in that area, and it's nice and all, but most of it was already telegraphed in earlier books. Frankly, not a single development suprised me in the least, either by what transpired or why--or even how. And it wouldn't matter much to new readers, so the book is only so-so on that level. The mystery is tissue thin. Enough said. The main charm of the series for me has been Brown's take on animals' view of the natural and human world. Her approach has slipped badly, IMO. Oh, the cats and dogs are still charming, but they've morphed into little more than mouthpieces to support Brown's various opinions--and sheesh, does she ever drone about opinions on everything from politics and religion to taxes and land use policy. My willing suspension of belief started to tank when a cat speculated about expiating sin--in those words. By the end I expected the animals to expound on the divine right of kings and FDR revoking the gold standard. Again, Cat's Eyewitness is a passingly amusing entry in the series for hardcore fans who want to know what happens to favorite characters. Unfortunately, Brown seems to have lost the light touch needed to pull it off very well in all other regards.
28 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Always a pleasure to read a book by this author,
This review is from: Cat's Eyewitness (Mrs. Murphy Mysteries) (Hardcover)
In a small hamlet in Virginia, animals talk to each other across species lines and the only ones unable to understand is the dumbest species: humans. Mary Minor "Harry " Haristeen loves her two cats Mrs. Murphy and Pewter and her corgi Tee Tucker; they reciprocate her feelings, going so far as to help her when she becomes too deeply involved in a murder investigation and puts her life in danger.The Greyfiars Monastery's has a Virgin Mary statue on their property that starts weeping bloody tears. Many people including some of the monks think it is a miracle. Monk Thomas is found frozen to death in a kneeling position besides the statue. Harry's intuition screams murder and her four legged protectors know a cardinal witnessed the homicide. The journalist covering this phenomenon is killed when someone sticks a pen in his eye. Harry thinks the killings and the tears are linked; she investigates but it is only because of her animal friends that she doesn't become the third murder victim. It is always a pleasure to read a book starring Harry and Mrs. Murphy but the CAT'S EYEWITNESS is particularly good as several changes in Harry's life has occurred. The heroine's ex-husband gives Harry a marriage proposal ultimatum or he will look elsewhere for love. Harry no longer works in the post office because she cannot bring her animals into the new facility. Susan, Harry's best friend, reveals a secret she kept for over two decades, and the sexpot Boom Boom finds a surprising new lover. Readers will find it impossible to figure out who the perpetrator is among the even tempered monks. Rita Mae Brown delights her fans with this fantastic feline mystery. Harriet Klausner
16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Who Wrote It?,
By Jane Doerr (Michigan) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cat's Eyewitness (Mrs. Murphy Mysteries) (Hardcover)
My 17-year-old granddaughter and I have been reading all the Mrs. Murphy books for the last 6 or 7 years, and enjoy trading the books back and forth and discussing them. But - the latest one, "Cat's Eyewitness," was a disappointment. As other reviewers have stated, there was a lot of preaching and philosophical discussion between the characters, which are Ms. Brown's own opinions. And the lesbian love affair was unnecessary. The Mrs. Murphy novels have become progressively more sex-themed, be it [...]. What began as a good series for a girl and her grandmother to share, has turned into "Should I lend her this one?" Of course, she's a big girl now! But I am disappointed. The murderer's identity was very easy to spot early on. I wondered if Ms. Brown employed a ghost writer for this one. Or maybe Sneaky Pie did actually write it!
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