Search
 Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Beneful Dog Food » General » Puss 'n Cahoots (Mrs. Murphy)January 6, 2009  
DogExplorer.com Navigation
Dog Explorer - Home
Contact Us
Dog Pictures
Dog Podcasts
World's Ugliest Dog
Dog Forum
VIEW CART
Checkout
International Orders & Shipping
Categories
Beneful Dog Food
Bil-Jac Dog Food
Breeder's Choice Dog Food
California Natural Dog Food
Canidae Dog Food
Cesar Dog Food
Chicken Soup for the Dog Lover's Soul
Dick Van Patten's Dog Food
Eukanuba Dog Food
Hill's Science Diet Dog Food
Holistic Blend Dog Food
Iams Dog Food
Innova Dog Food
Karma Organics Dog Food
Life's Abundance Health Dog Food
Merrick Premium Dog Food
Missing Link Dog Food
Nutro Dog Food
Pro Pac Dog Food
Sojourner Farms Raw Dog Food
Solid Gold MMillenia Dog Food
Wellness Dog Food
Wysong Canine Dog Food
Special Diet Dog Food
All Natural Dog Food
Puppy Dog Food
Senior Dog Food
Vegetarian Dog Food
Weight-Control Dog Food
Three Dog Bakery
Dog Fish Oil Supplements
Dog Gas Relief
Dog Joint Health Supplements
Pill Pockets for Dogs
Dog Skin-Fur Supplements
Dog Vitamins
Puss 'n Cahoots (Mrs. Murphy)
Puss 'n Cahoots (Mrs. Murphy)
enlarge
Author: Rita Mae Brown
Publisher: Bantam
Category: Book

List Price: $7.50
Buy New: $3.57
You Save: $3.93 (52%)
Buy New/Used from $1.20

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars(49 reviews)
Sales Rank: 74314

Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Mass Market Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 352
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 6.9 x 4.3 x 1.1

ISBN: 0553586823
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9780553586824
ASIN: 0553586823

Publication Date: January 29, 2008
Release Date: January 29, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • The Purrfect Murder (Mrs. Murphy Mysteries)
  • Sour Puss: A Mrs. Murphy Mystery (Mrs. Murphy Mysteries)
  • The Cat Who Had 60 Whiskers (Cat Who...)
  • Cat Pay the Devil: A Joe Grey Mystery (Joe Grey Mysteries)
  • Cat's Eyewitness (Mrs. Murphy Mysteries)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Instead of a proper second honeymoon, the newly remarried Harry and Fair Haristeen leave cozy Crozet, Virginia, for Shelbyville, Kentucky, site of the famous saddlebred horse show. There they?ll visit dear friends Joan Hamilton and Larry Hodge and enjoy a week among some of the finest horses, trainers, and riders in the country.

But soon after they arrive, events veer mysteriously?and murderously?off course. First, Joan?s ruby and sapphire horsehead heirloom pin is stolen from her private box at the fairgrounds. Next, a young film star?s prize three-gaited mare disappears into thin air. There is no lack of suspects, from hotheaded trainers and jealous rivals to vicious ex-spouses. Then a body is found flagrantly murdered and it?s obvious to Harry that someone at Shelbyville is sending a strong message: winning is only secondary?first prize is survival.

As Harry searches for clues, rediscovers life as a married woman, and deals with her upcoming fortieth birthday, her four-legged detective friends are already on the case. But is animal instinct any match for human depravity? Especially with two humans to protect and a killer on the prowl?


From the Hardcover edition.



Customer Reviews:   Read 44 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars They PAY editors to let this kind of trash go to press?   November 19, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

My mom found (literally "found") this book in her travels. She couldn't get past the first ten pages and passed it along to me. Her explanation was that she doesn't enjoy books with loads of characters. Now I've read sci-fi, fantasy, mystery, romance, heck even a little horror. I'm new to the RMB Cat series, and I'm just about half way through the book, but still can find little to recommend it. There are storycrafting techniques barely worthy of a first novel...certainly not a fortieth! For instance:

There are more characters in this story than are really necessary. Whenever an author puts a list of characters in the front (or back) of the book, that always sends up a red flag for me. If the reader can't keep track of the characters, the author has done a poor job bringing them to life. Does Harry really need to have TWO cats AND TWO dogs? True, I may have just ticked off all of RMB's fans with this, but a good author needs keep in mind that not everyone who reads this book has read everything else before it and needs to have EVERY character from EVERY previous installment appear (I'm looking at YOU, Spider Robinson!)

Do we have to make things extra confusing by giving our two main characters gender-confusing names? The guy is called "Fair" and the gal is called "Harry".

All of our protagonists have nothing but good qualities. This is so "Mary-Sue" it's insipid. The closest thing that comes to a fault is that Pewter is fat. Oh, and the humans can't sense as acutely as the animals. Oh, gee whiz!

On the one hand, there is w-a-a-a-y too much information on Saddlebred horses, and on the other, the information given seems rather pointless and is awkwardly jammed into the narrative...it doesn't flow from the characters' mouths. Fiction shouldn't have sidebars.

Probably the worst sin of all, is that the story has a lot of TELLING and very little SHOWING. What few descriptions there are seem to be brief, mechanical, and cursory. I know Pewter is gray, Murphy's a tiger, and Tucker's a corgi...but it took I don't know how many pages to find out that Cookie was a dog, much less a Jack Russel. I couldn't tell you what the humans looked like, other than Renata was beautiful, and Fair was tall and around 41.

I never thought I'd rip an author a new one over something as trivial as the Acknowledgments, but the sheer arrogance of those in this book earns RMB this rare privilege. Who the heck thanks their researcher in the first paragraph, a local physician in the second, and then writes this as a third paragraph, "You know how authors always write 'Whatever mistakes are made are entirely my own'? I much prefer to blame the above."?

I will not pay money to read anything by this author. Ever. I don't like giving my money to arrogant people.

I'm sorry, Rita Mae and Sneaky Pie, but this book is just plain sophomoric. I don't know which one of you is doing the majority of the writing, but I think it's time to pass it over to your partner. One of you is not doing a good job.



2 out of 5 stars There are other contenders for your attention.   November 8, 2008
  3 out of 5 found this review helpful

I loved this series. Rita Mae Brown had a winning combination with her plucky postmistress heroine Harry and her dog and cat sidekicks. The small town setting of Crozet was one I could identify with, the characters were people I could recognize (Southerners) and the dialog where the animal characters talked with one another was a delightful fantasy touch. The murders were gruesome but the ambiance was decidedly cozy. Having said that, I'm dreadfully disappointed in this book.

The setting, at the famous Saddlebred show in Shelbyville, KY, is well depicted with the glitz and glamor of fabulous horses competing in an electric atmosphere. I don't miss Crozet and I'm glad to see that Harry, remarried to and reunited with her ex-husband Fair, is finally being treated like she should.

But overall, the story is a disaster. There are many good mystery elements: a missing jewel, a stolen horse, a murdered man with double crosses cut in his hands. But the plotting is sloppy and the focus is away from the character of Harry. Read some other book. This is a weak entry in the series by an author who can write much better than this.



3 out of 5 stars Interesting but NOT a Winner   August 21, 2008
Rita Mae Brown's Mrs. Murphy mysteries have begun to take on aspects of a soapbox...and it's irritating. What I found enjoyable in the earlier books were the interactions among the characters, human and animal, and the descriptions of the beautiful Virginia countryside. There's less and less of that now. Instead we're treated to personal harangues...and there's not even a balanced rebuttal or a respectable opposing perspective. I 've just begun reading the book after this one, "The Purrfect Murder" and it's even worse. But I'll withhold judgement until I'm finished with it. Still loyality keeps me going and I keep hoping the old Mrs. Murphy will come through in the end.


2 out of 5 stars This is a mystery, right? Hello?   July 14, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

The Mrs. Murphy series has been a delight! While some series featuring animals prominently in the plot can easily put the reader into a diabetic coma, this series stands out because the animals have not overshadowed the main characters, who have been well-developed and have lived in a realistic world. It has been edgy and tart with good plots and murders galore in the small town of Crozet, Va., in each successive volume. We have heard the thoughts of the animals in italicized conversations that did not interrupt the unfolding of the plot and, in fact, often aided its flow. This series has had well structured plots and thoughtful character development while including the right amount of local and cultural history of that region as well as thorough but not overdone amounts of background explanatory detail of elements such as fox hunting, farming, and horses necessary to the story.
Unfortunately, however, "Puss'n Cahoots," like "Sour Puss" and "Cat's Eyewitness" before it, continues her disturbing and thoroughly annoying trend of forgetting that it's a mystery story and not a soapbox for the author's favorite cause(s) of the month. Long before the first murder, the story screeches to a halt several times with what I assume Ms. Brown believes are well-presented arguments for her currents favs: illegal immigration and performance enhancing drugs leading at the first turn. There was a time when Ms. Brown could deal with a issue she believes in with one or two well-crafted sentences without stopping the story in its tracks; perhaps she had an editor then. Now, we the reader are subjected to pages of preaching talking points ad nauseam which completely detract from the mystery, and this happens throughout the story! I actually found myself skimming through her sermonizing to try to find the story line again. When even the animals put on a surplice, Ms. Brown needs to remember that Crozet, VA. (or Shelbyville, KY) is not a part of Hyde Park, London, and get off her soapbox! Forget a tight plot with a suspenseful and foreboding atmosphere; forget a suspenseful climax; forget a tight denouement which ties up all the pieces neatly. These elements are barely present (or not here at all) as if they were afterthoughts because Ms. Brown was too busy preaching to craft a good mystery story instead of the weakly developed alleged mystery that is "Puss'n Cahoots."
I give "Puss'n Cahoots" two stars because Ms. Brown does include a lot of her trademark background information about her setting: Saddlebred horse shows and all therein. This is part of what made this series so good and once again I learned a lot. Otherwise, sadly, thumbs disappointedly down.
To rescue this series as a legitimate mystery series, Ms. Brown needs to do two things: (1) start writing real mysteries again, and (2) STOP preaching at us! Would Miranda Hogendobber put too many ingredients in her cinnamon buns and then tell us why we need to like them?



3 out of 5 stars Going downhill   May 29, 2008
For this outing Fair and Harry are on their honeymoon at a horse show with all of Harry's pets along for the ride. Gone was the cozy feeling of the Post Office and her usual friends. The friendships in this book seemed forced. Too much time was spent on descriptions of horse shows. The dialog was dreadful and stilted as the author preached her political beliefs through her characters. I'm sad to say this is probably the last of the series that I'll read. In the past couple of books the author seems more concerned with preaching her political views rather than telling an engaging story. I miss the mysteries and fun of the earlier books. Heck, I even named my corgi, Tucker.


Pet Insurance Coverage

The Premium Dog Food Online Store From DogExplorer.com

International Orders & Shipping

We can't ship dog food to any address outside the USA though can often ship books and DVDs.

Attention: For International Orders!

Please Consider Making Your Order Through Our Affiliate eBay As We Don't Ship Most Items To Non-US Locations - You Can Find What You Are Looking For There:

Disclaimer: This is an Amazon.com storefront - the products referenced
on this site are manufactured and sold by parties other than
DogExplorer.com

DogExplorer.com makes no representations regarding either the
products or any information vendors offer about their products.

Any questions, complaints, or claims regarding the products must be
directed to the appropriate manufacturer or vendor, or to Amazon.com

Affiliated Stores
Dog Training & Premium Dog Food
Dog Collars - Dog Leashes|Custom Leather Dog Collars - Dog Leads
Dog Insurance|Quickcare Pet Insurance
Pet Portrait Artists|Pet Portrait Artist Oregon
Pet Portrait Artists|Pet Portrait Photography Los Angeles
Dog Veterinarian California|Dog Veterinarian Oxnard Ventura
Dog Walker California|Dog Walker Redondo Beach
Monks of New Skete Book|Discount Dog Crate
Cesar Millan Dog Whisperer|Dog Door
Tamar Geller Book|Dog Car Ramp
Radio-Wireless Fences|Dog Grooming Table
Doggles Dog Goggles|Dog Collars
Agilite Dog Agility|Dog Apparel
Electronic Bark Collars|Dog Beds
Dog News|Pill Pockets
Flea Control|Advantage Flea Dog
CAPSTAR Flea Dog|Frontline Flea Dog
K-9 Advantix|Program Flea Dog
Horses & Horse Tack
Men's Ariat Boot|Western Saddles
Used Horse Trailer For Sale|Women's Ariat Boots
Camera Store For Video and Digital Still Photography
Sony HD Video Camera|Digital Camera Store


© 2009 All Rights Reserved.