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The Cat Who Went Bananas [Secure eReader (recommended)/Mobipocket/Microsoft Reader]
eBook by Lilian Jackson Braun
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eBook Category: Mystery/Crime
eBook Description: James Qwilleran and his famous felines, Koko and Yum Yum, are back for another mystery-solving stint in the beloved bestselling Cat Who ... series. The good people of Pickax are agog with anticipation: Not only is the new bookstore, The Pirate's Chest, about to open, but the Theatre Club is set to perform Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest. The play does not continue past opening night, however, for a member of the cast is killed in a car accident ... or was it an accident? Koko seems to suspect otherwise, and Qwill and his clever cats have their work cut out for them.
eBook Publisher: Penguin Group/Putnam Adult
Fictionwise Release Date: August 2005
This eBook is also available in the following bundle(s):
This eBook is part of the following series:
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Available eBook Formats [Secure eReader (recommended)/Mobipocket/Microsoft Reader - What's this?]: SECURE MOBIPOCKET FORMAT [373 KB], SECURE MICROSOFT READER FORMAT [268 KB] - Requires Microsoft Reader 2.1.1 for PCs, or Microsoft Reader 2.2.2 on Pocket PC 2002 handheld devices. Some older Pocket PCs can be upgraded. Learn More., SECURE EREADER (RECOMMENDED) FORMAT [162 KB]
All formats: Printing DISABLED, Read-aloud DISABLED
eReader (recommended) ISBN: 078655648X Microsoft Reader ISBN: 0786556463 MobiPocket Reader ISBN: 0786592559

ONE Jim Qwilleran was primarily a columnist for the Moose County Something, but he was more. Previously a crime reporter for major dailies across the continent, he had relocated in the north country when he inherited the vast Klingenschoen fortune. This he immediately turned over to a philanthropic foundation, claiming that he felt uncomfortable with too much money. The K Fund, as it was called, improved schools, medical facilities, and the general quality of life in Moose County, leaving Qwilleran free to mix with the people, listen to their stories, write his column, and manage the care and feeding of two Siamese cats. The three of them lived in a converted apple barn on the edge of Pickax City. It was there that Qwilleran was preparing their breakfast one day in September, arranging red salmon attractively on two plates with a garnish of crumbled Roquefort. (They were somewhat spoiled.) They sat on top of the bar in two identical bundles of fur, supervising the food preparation. They were Koko and Yum Yum, well known to readers of the "Qwill Pen" column. The male was lithe, muscular, and cocky; the female smaller and softer and modest, although she could be demanding. Both had the fawn fur, precise brown points, and blue eyes of the breed . . . as well as the Siamese tendency to voice an opinion on everything; Koko with a vehement "Yow!" and Yum Yum with a soprano "Now-ow!" Just as Qwilleran was placing the two plates on the floor under the kitchen table, Koko's attention jerked away to a spot on the wall. A moment later the wall phone rang. Before it could ring twice, Qwilleran said pleasantly into the mouthpiece, "Good morning." "You're quick on the trigger, Qwill!" said the well-modulated voice of a woman he knew, Carol Lanspeak. He explained, "I have an electronic sensor here. He tells me when the phone is going to ring and even screens incoming calls as acceptable or otherwise. What's on your mind, Carol?" "Just wanted to ask if you're going to write the program notes for the new production." "Actually, I have another idea I'd like to discuss with you. Will you be in the store this morning?" "All day! How about coffee and doughnuts at ten o'clock?" "Not today," he said regretfully. "I've just had my annual physical, and Dr. Diane lectured me on my diet." The Lanspeaks were a fourth-generation family in Moose County, dating back to pioneer days. Larry's grandmother ran a general store, selling kerosene, calico, and penny candy. Larry's father started the department store on Main Street. Larry himself, having acting talent, went to New York and had a little success, but then he married an actress and they came back to Pickax to manage the family business and launch a theatre club. Larry's daughter was the medical doctor who advised Qwilleran to consume more broccoli, less coffee—and one banana a day. After taking leave of the cats, Qwilleran walked downtown to Lanspeak's Department Store. From the barnyard an unpaved road led through a dense patch of woods to the Park Circle, where Main Street divided around a small park. On its rim were two churches, the courthouse, the public library, and a huge block of fieldstone that had once been the Klingenschoen mansion. Now it was a theatre for stage productions, and the headquarters of the Pickax theatre club. Northward, Main Street was a stretch of stone buildings more than a century old—now housing stores, offices, and the newly refurbished Mackintosh Inn. The Lanspeaks' department store, which had started a century before, advertised "new-fashioned ideas with old-fashioned service." Arriving there, Qwilleran walked between glass cases of jewelry, scarves, handbags, cosmetics, and blouses—to the offices in the rear, bowing to the clerks who hailed him: "Hi, Mr. Q. How's Koko, Mr. Q?" He was known not only for his lively newspaper column and his philanthropy and his Siamese cats, but also for his magnificent pepper-and-salt moustache! It had not been equaled since Mark Twain visited Pickax in 1895. Qwilleran was a well-built six-feet-two, in his fifties, with a pleasing manner and a mellifluous voice. But it was his impressive moustache and brooding gaze that attracted attention. His photo appeared at the top of each "Qwill Pen" column. Both Lanspeaks were working in the office. Apart from their voice quality, there was nothing about the couple to mark them as actors. There was nothing striking about them, but onstage they could assume different personalities with professional skill. At the moment they were small-town storekeepers. Copyright © 2004 by Lilian Jackson Braun
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