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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Reviewed by Michael LaRocca, author of RISING FROM THE ASHES, August 26, 2003
If you own a cat, does it ever seem like you own two of them? The one who wants to be cuddled, and the one who flees your attention. The one who purrs calmly at your feet as you sleep and watches you build furniture, and the one who randomly charges through the house attacking invisible monsters?In this book, all is explained. That is exactly what your cat is doing. Attacking invisible monsters. Invisible to you. Not to the cat. And, by the way, the monsters are real. A small kitten is rescued from the roadside. Her owners, who have never owned a cat before, don't know what to make of her strange behavior. It's not strange at all, though. They don't realize this, because they've never owned a cat. As a cat owner myself, I was groaning at bits of the first chapter. It's obvious the characters in this book don't know cats. But, lots of people don't. Not a thing unrealistic about it. But, I know cats, so I groaned. At the characters, not the author. The author knows how to tell a story. Chapter two, the balancing act begins. How can an author write middle grade fiction, largely through a cat's eyes, without the anthropomorphism growing trite, twee or condescending? Well, they could do far worse than follow Schofield's example. Cupcake is a kitten, somehow separated from her mother before she could learn the valuable purpose cats serve, much less the skills she needs. I'd never name a cat of mine Cupcake, but again, her pet humans are new to all this. Consider it one more obstacle she must overcome. According to the book's web page, it contains "humor, suspense, and lessons about finding courage." That's absolutely correct. And, I enjoyed reading it. I recommend visiting the web page. Oh, and please don't judge this book by its cover. Quite honestly, I don't like the cover. But I do like the book. ...
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