SUMMARY: The team of Koko, the brilliant Siamese cat, and Qwilleran, the reporter with the perceptive moustache, is back in action -- with an adorable female Siamese, Yum Yum, added to the household.When Qwilleran decides to do a feature series on Junktown, he gets more than he bargained for. Not th
The cat who turned on and off
โ Scribed by Lilian Jackson Braun
- Publisher
- Jove
- Year
- 1986;2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 119 KB
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
SUMMARY: The team of Koko, the brilliant Siamese cat, and Qwilleran, the reporter with the perceptive moustache, is back in action -- with an adorable female Siamese, Yum Yum, added to the household.When Qwilleran decides to do a feature series on Junktown, he gets more than he bargained for. Not the dope den he anticipated, Junktown is a haven for antique dealers and collectors -- as strange a lot as the crafty reporter has ever encountered. When a mysterious fall ends the career -- and the life -- of one of Junktown's leading citizens, Qwilleran is convinced it was no accident. But, as usual, it takes Koko to prove he's right.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Cat has a dream. She runs. She flips. She jumps. She slips. Will Cat make the team?
Meet prizewinning reporter Jim Qwilleran and his extraordinary Siamese cats Koko and Yum Yum--the most unlikely, most unusual, most delightful team in detective fiction! The way Jim Qwilleran sees it, there's nothing worse than being left high and dry. But that's exactly where he's been ever since a
\*You are what you eat. . . . *Cat smart, sassy, and funnybut thin, shes not. Until her class science project. Thats when she winds up doing an experimenton herself. Before she knows it, Cat is livingand eatinglike the hominids, our earliest human ancestors. True, no chips or TV is a bummer and no
_You are what you eat. . . . _ Cat smart, sassy, and funny--but thin, she's not. Until her class science project. That's when she winds up doing an experiment--on herself. Before she knows it, Cat is living--and eating--like the hominids, our earliest human ancestors. True, no chips or TV is a
One of the great derisive monuments to the imbecilities of the tourist experience, Mark Twain's (1835-1910) account of his tour with a group of fellow Americans around the sights of Europe is both hilarious and touching, Twain's exasperation and dismay at the phoney and exploitative being matched by