Martin H. Greenberg has been called "the best anthologist since
Ellery Queen." In addition to coediting the Cat Crimes series, he
is the editor of Women on the Edge. He resides in Green Bay,
Wisconsin.
Ed Gorman has won the Shamus Award and has been nominated for both
the Edgar and Anthony Awards. He makes his home in Cedar Rapids,
Iowa.
Larry Segriff is the author of three novels and the coeditor of the
award-winning anthology The Fine Art of Murder. He lives in Green
Bay, Wisconsin.
"There is much to purr over."
--Publishers Weekly
This latest entry in the Cat Crimes series pegs a collection of original cat tales to holidays large and small, from New Year's to Boxing Day. There is much to purr over in this litter, although Carole Nelson Douglas does her debonair Midnight Louie a particularly bad turn with "Iä Iä Iä-Iä! Cthulouie!," which will please neither Louie's devotees nor followers of H.P. Lovecraft. In John Lutz's delightful "But Once a Year," Jock Leary celebrates St. Patrick's Day a little too exuberantly when a stranger sells him a lucky green cat for the price of a beer. The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. solves an Ellery Queen-like puzzle and wins an inheritance for an old friend in Jon L. Breen's "Longevity Has Its Place." And Barbara Collins, in her delightfully chilling "To Grandmother's House We Go," cultivates a Shirley Jackson-esque edge as a cat helps a young girl find the sort of grandmother she has always wanted. In Nancy Pickard's "Dr. Couch Saves a Cat," an elderly veterinarian entertains his young granddaughter with a clever tale of a murder whose solution rests on the color of a cat. These small mysteries celebrate the non-quotidian in their subjects and settings. (Nov.)
"There is much to purr over."
--Publishers Weekly
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