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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

An elderly woman drugged, a young woman killed, and the cat's the sole witness...

When Rachel Murdock and her sister Jennifer receive a call for help from their favorite niece, Lilly, in Breakers Beach, CA, they quickly hop a train from Los Angeles to see her — but not before collecting their prized cat Samantha in a picnic basket and bringing her along for the ride. Samatha, it turns out, is an heiress, the inheritor of a fortune left by a wealthy relative, and so the attempt at the cat's life, made right after they arrive, comes as a shock. The cat survives, but unfortunately, Lilly, murdered soon thereafter, is not so lucky.

By the time the police arrive, the clues are already falling into place. The source of Lilly's trouble is revealed to be a gambling debt incurred during an attempt to cheat at bridge, and the suspects in her slaying quickly pile up. But then another corpse is discovered, buried in the nearby sand, and it becomes clear that the killing spree concerns more than just the young lady's personal money trouble. With the authorities distracted by lurid details, it's up to Rachel and her furry friend to uncover the subtleties containing the solution to the puzzle.

A prototypical early "cat mystery," written before the subgenre became a staple of cozy mystery fiction, The Cat Saw Murder is an entertaining and endlessly surprising whodunit with a focus on felines. Reissued for the first time in over half a decade, the book, written pseudonymously by the author better known for her hardboiled and suspense novels, is the first in the long-running Rachel Murdock series.

Includes discussion guide questions for use in book clubs.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 19, 2021
      Fans of astute amateur elderly sleuths will be delighted by this suspenseful mystery from Hitchens (1907–1973), first published in 1939. Seventy-year-old Rachel Murdock travels to Breakers Beach, Calif., at the request of her 40-ish niece-by-marriage, Lily Sticklemann, to help with some unspecified trouble. Upon Rachel’s arrival, Lily reveals she’s deeply in debt. Initially unforthcoming about how she got into this predicament, Lily eventually admits that she lost money gambling at cards. Then someone spikes Rachel’s medicine with morphine and takes advantage of her incapacity to beat in Lily’s head. Rachel aids the official police, and Lily’s pet cat plays a vital role by providing a clue to the identity of the killer, who claims another victim before the dramatic reveal. Hitchens’s use of foreshadowing elevates this above similar whodunits. That the observant Rachel is an appealing Jessica Fletcher antecedent makes the prospect of her further exploits in the American Mystery Classics series welcome.

    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2021
      A California spinster can't save her niece from murder but can leave the police detective assigned to the case in the dust when it comes to solving it in this reprint, originally published under the byline D.B. Olsen. Summoned to Surf House, a moldering Breakers Beach rooming house, by the pressing invitation of Lily Sticklemann, the adopted daughter of her late brother, Philip, Miss Rachel Murdock finds that her unattractive niece is deeply in debt over a bridge scam that backfired; that Charles Malloy, the former actor who's won Lily's heart, has been missing for three weeks; and that Samantha, the black cat Miss Rachel has brought with her, has been targeted for death. That's hardly surprising since Samantha, who inherited the estate of Miss Rachel's late sister, Agatha, is worth more than Lily. But why would someone beat Lily to death as Miss Rachel slumbers next to her in a drugged stupor? What is Detective Lt. Stephen Mayhew to make of a drunk's report of a pair of detached human hands on the adjacent beach? And why has Charles' estranged wife suddenly turned up at Surf House with their daughter? Joyce Carol Oates' introduction pronounces this 1939 series kickoff the first cat mystery. Whether or not that's strictly true, Samantha certainly plays many roles--not as a detective but as a companion, a bearer of clues, the possible victim of an impersonation, and the victim of yet another murder attempt. The residents of Surf House are forgettable, but the mystery is clever, the tone appealing, and Miss Rachel a treasure.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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