#Shirley Rousseau Murphy
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#the catswold portal#shirley rousseau murphy#fantasy#book poll#have you read this book poll#polls#requested
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I’m trying to start a collection of every xenofiction book from a cats POV that I can find!! this is my criteria list:
older middle-grade and up fiction stories (maybe some exceptions for children's books if I really like them)
Mostly or only cat POV, not stories about people with cat sidekicks
about actual cats, not a human that shapeshifts into a cat, nor cat-like two-legged humanoids
Focusing on domestic cats and maybe small wild cats, not big cats
It doesn’t have to be a traditionally published book, but it does have to be something completed that I can buy a copy of
Graphic novels count!
These are the ones I know so far, please let me know if you have any more that I can add! (not listing every book’s sequels, series are presumed to be lumped together)
(also note: I have not read most of these books yet, so I can’t say what kind of graphic/sensitive content they may or may not have. I'm just trying to make as complete a list as I can for personal reference)
Warrior Cats (obviously, this one is a free space)
Varjak Paw -- S.F Said
Tailchaser’s Song -- Tad Williams
The Wild Road -- Gabriel King
Catwings -- Ursula K. Le Guin
Stray -- A.N Wilson
The Book of Night with Moon -- Diane Duane
The Wildings -- Nilanjana Roy
The Tygrine Cat -- Inbali Iserles
The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents -- Terry Pratchett
The Familiars -- Adam Jay Epstein
In the Long Dark -- Brian Carter
Felidae -- Akif Pirinçci. Unfortunately! but I don’t want to talk about him and no one should buy his work. just adding so people know i’m aware of this book already
The Cats of Roxville Station -- Jean Craighead George
The Traveling Cat Chronicles -- Hiro Arikawa
Blitzcat -- Robert Westall
Cat House -- Michael Peak
Cats in the City of Plague -- A.L Marlow
Guardian Cats and the Lost Books of Alexandria -- Rahma Krambo
Cat on the Edge -- Shirley Rousseau Murphy
I Am a Cat -- Natsume Sōseki
The Alchemist’s Cat -- Robin Jarvis
The Stink Files -- Jennifer L. Holm & Jonathan Hamel
I, Scheherazade: Memoirs of a Siamese Cat -- Douglass Parkhirst
The Mouse Butcher -- Dick King-Smith
Heroes Rising: Book One of Catmage: Genesis -- Meryl Yourish
#theres gotta be more so send me suggestions plz#yarrow speaks#yarrow reads other books#xenofiction#reblogs to spread this are appreciated#warrior cats#when I have time i will come back and organize them by middle grade-YA-or adult#maybe include upper middle grade for things like warrior cats itself where many people cant agree whether its really middle grade or YA#middle grade books have a hell of a range in tone...i would be guessing with a lot of them#frankly im not sure how to draw a clear line between YA and adult either but well cross that bridge when we come to it
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2, 4, 6, 12, 19
2. First fairy tale retelling you ever read
I already mentioned Ella Enchanted was my first. The more difficult question to answer is which one was second, because I didn't come back to fairy tale retellings until many years later. It's possible it was The Goose Girl by Shannon Hale, though this was before I read the fairy tale, so, hilariously, I quit halfway through because I thought the talking dead horse head was so dumb that I couldn't read further. (I eventually did come back to it after reading the original, and I loved it).
4. Fairy tale retelling you've read with the earliest publishing date
If we count The Blue Castle as a "Bluebeard" or "Cinderella" retelling, it takes the earliest slot with the publishing date of 1926.
If that doesn't count, the earliest is the "Cinderella" retelling Silver Woven in My Hair by Shirley Rousseau Murphy from 1977.
(I did once read a few pages of a Cinderella retelling by Louisa May Alcott, but I found it too boring to continue.)
6. Fairy tale you've read the most retellings of
Already answered. It's "Cinderella". By a lot. Second place might go to "The Twelve Dancing Princesses" because there was a point where I made a point of hunting down and reading every retelling of it I could find.
12. Fairy tale retelling you wish more people would read
I've gotten a few people to read this one, but I'll always shill for Kate Stradling's Brine and Bone as a "Little Mermaid" retelling that follows the original plot while making it clear that the ending is happy.
19. A fairy tale you'd like to retell
Right now, I yearn to retell "East of the Sun, West of the Moon" in a way that captures what I've always wanted in a retelling, but I can't find an angle that gives me a way in to the story.
#answered asks#fairy tales#fairy tale retellings#cinderella#the goose girl#brine and bone#east of the sun west of the moon
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The Wolf Bell by Shirley Rousseau Murphy, cover by Michael Mariano (1979)
#1970s#michael mariano#shirley rousseau murphy#Avon Books#paperback#vintage#book#fantasy#the wolf bell
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The Longest Library #2: Cat Raise The Dead by Shirley Rousseau Murphy (AKA cat balls)
This is a series in which I attempt to read and review all (or most of) my library of 297 books.
Rundown: Two sentient, talking cats solving a mystery involving disappearing old folks and a cat burglar. I give it a 2/5 because it's like a slightly undercooked brownie, you think you like it but by the third bite it's falling apart and isn't holding together very well and you kind of want it to reach the end and it doesn't feel great anymore. You have to put it down and pick out the nice bits and kind of ignore the other bits and just drink a tall glass of milk afterwards.
So what I mean by that, is that the pacing, both in the narrative sense and the pace at which clues are revealed or become more concrete, is too slow. It felt like I was being shown a bunch of unrelated stuff, and the one or two things I did connect painted a much more interesting picture for myself than it turned out to be. I felt shorted. After the descriptions of the frighteningly lifelike dolls and the missing old people I was ready for some real serial killer shit. There was too much space between finding clues and the climax (where everything came together). It felt like I was handed 5 out of 500 puzzle pieces, and then shown the rest of it at the last minute. None of those five fit together in any way. The author was a little too guarded about the conclusion.
Now, not to diss the big mystery itself. It's effective and devilishly practical, and literally would have been an air tight scheme if not for those meddling cats.
The secondary sub-mystery feels unnecessary. It could have stood alone as it's own thing, or have been concluded in the first half. It feels very haphazardly tied to the main mystery.
There's quite a few run on sentences that could have done with some pruning. The imagery is vibrant, and would be great if the book was only about the cats. But it's not. The narrative keeps weaving in and out of cat-centric things like hunting in the moonlight and a gnarly rat fight, and back to the mystery again. It feels disjointed, and could do with some tightening.
Also the author keeps "showing and not telling" me that the main cat is clearly not neutered. God please. Effective imagery. But holy fuck stop showing me this cat's little furry balls.
Now for some lines I wanted to comment on.
"Last week, coming out of the Felther house up on Ridgeview, with her inner coat pockets loaded with a lovely set of Rose of Erin sterling and a fine array of serving pieces, when she saw the gray tom watching from atop a black station wagon and she faced him and swore at him, his eyes had flared with rage. Sentient rage. The kind of violent anger you see only in human eyes."
"He turned away, trotted away purposefully up the side street as if she didn't exist, moved off toward the front of the house, prancing insolently up the center of the sidewalk under the streetlight, his stub tail wiggling back and forth, his tomcat balls making him walk slightly straddle-legged."
"The hunting would be fine, the rabbits giddy and silly in the racing light. She felt giddy herself, felt suddenly moon silly. Felt like rolling and playing."
ZOOMIES
"Harper looked the car over, took out a pack of cigarettes, then changed his mind and put them back in his pocket. As if he didn't want to smoke up the pristine beauty. [...] Again he took a cigarette, slipping it from the pack in his pocket in an automatic reflex. He started to tamp it on the door of the Bentley, then put it back again."
The author is really good at small details like this, little character details and mannerisms that get lost in the rest of the incredibly dense descriptions and things-that-aren't-moving-the-plot-faster.
"She was dressed in jeans and one of those T-shirts that made a statement, a shirt she had obviously selected as appropriate for the occasion. Across her chest four cats approached the viewer, and on the back of the shirt, which he'd seen as she came around the car to get in, was a rear view of the same four cats walking away, as if they were stepping invisibly through the wearer's chest, thier tails high, and, of course, all their fascinating equipment in plain sight."
This is Dillon. She's like, 15. Please choose a different shirt Dillon. Author, please stop talking about how fascinating cat balls are for like one second, oh my god.
"He and Dr.Firreti were waiting to see if the pills would snap Barney out of it. It was midafternoon now, and he wondered if Clyde was at home. Worrying, he said a little cat prayer for Barney."
I want a church cat, to go to church, and reeeead his biiiiblee~
"...her spike heels sharp enough to puncture a cat's throat. It was Dulcie who glanced away. This was the woman who could afford a three hundred thousand dollar Bentley Azure but who presumably spent her days among bedpans counting soiled sheets and inspecting medication charts. A woman who had to be driven totally by love for humanity; why else would she do this? This woman who, Clyde had told him, supervised every detail of the retirement villa like an army general. As she disappeared into an office, Joe shivered, and he, too, looked away."
ALERT, EVIL VILLAIN SPOTTED, SHE IS OBVIOUSLY UP TO NO GOOD (tm)
"If Clyde ordered you not to go near Casa Capri, you'd be up there in the shake of a whisker." [...] "Joe wanted to say, 'You thought visiting the old folks would be all kippers and cream,' wanted to say, 'Casa Capri didn't turn out like you expected.' But she glared as him so crossly he shut his mouth."
There's a lot of colorful writing meant to invoke the sharpness and whimsicality surrounding life as a cat, but it suffers from (what I feel are) tone problems. 'kippers and cream' and 'a shake of your tail' right alongside visceral descriptions of the killing blow on a wild rabbit, slowly devouring/pulling it apart. It would be immersive if not for the cat puns and colloquialisms that sound like they belong on a plaque someplace in your Nan's house.
"Tramping heavy-pawed among the delicate bottles, he posed before the mirror, twitching a whisker, giving her a toothy grin. Panning and turning, he glanced over his shoulder, studying his stub tail and his tomcat equipment. She hadn't known he was such a ham."
ANYWAY, 2 down, 295 to go.
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Read Cat Chase the Moon.
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The Catswold Portal
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REVIEW:
CAT CHASE THE MOON (Joe Grey Mystery) by Shirley Rousseau Murphy at The Reading Cafe:
‘a fun series, exciting mysteries, and fantastic characters’
http://www.thereadingcafe.com/cat-chase-the-moon-by-shirley-rousseau-murphy/
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From The Cat, the Devil, and Lee Fontana by Shirley Rousseau Murphy, 2014.
They've had many lives and many ages: cats I've met in my time travels.
Wondering about this post? Wait for the dissertation (TBA). For now: Weblog ◆ Books ◆ Videos ◆ Music ◆ Etsy
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Book dump!!!
One of the great parts of being an adult is that I can get in my car and go to my favorite used bookstores whenever I want. (SUPPORT YOUR LOCALS!!)
Today my partner is out of state for work, my little is with grandparents and I have had a glorious day of nothing. I should have done some chores (and I probably still will) but I took my ass to my two faves and loaded up!
Starting from the bottom, I grabbed a Leslie Patricelli for the little. We love her books. Her illustrations are fun and the stories just right for someone growing (little is 3.5.)
Then we have a handful of the Time Warp Trio by Jon Scieszka. Those are kinda for little when bigger, but also mostly for me because they’re awesome and I’ve read all of the series the library has. (You may know Scieszka from The Stinky Cheeseman.)
Next is Cat After Dark by Shirley Rousseau Murphy. This is a mystery series my mom got me hooked on. It’s about Joe Grey, a talking cat who secretly solves mysteries and calls in anonymous tips to the local police force. It’s good I promise.
A couple of Agatha Christies because who doesn’t like a good, well written murder. Mystery! A good, well written mystery.
Lonesome Dove I started to read on archive.org, but kept forgetting my place when I couldn’t stay logged in. Yes, I’m secretly a cowboy at heart. Yes, I’m going to watch the movies when I finish. Yes, that means I will eventually watch Karl play a cowboy 🤠
Keith Laumer. This is an odd one. Back at university, a classmates gave me a random stack of sci-fi to read. It took me years to remember the author’s name. So I decided why not give him a try. If I don’t like it I’ll drop it in Mom’s bag to sell back and earn a dollar or so on her account.
The Man in the Thick Lead Suit is also a gamble. I have a strong interest in nuclear disasters and nuclear development. I got this one from the nuclear history section. I can’t find a summary to tell me what it’s about, but someone is selling it on Amazon for $719.
Lastly, Neal Stephenson. Another I haven’t read yet, but I trust that it will be good. This will be my third of his and his second one was one I randomly picked up too. His book Seveneves was so good that I trust anything by him will be interesting. (Seriously, if nothing else, look up the opening line to Seveneves. It will hook you.)
Off to read now. Write some more scones later too. Later lovelies!!
#books!!#local bookstore#Leslie patricelli#Jon Scieszka#Joe grey#agatha christie#larry mcmurtry#Keith laumer#neal stephenson#read read read!!!
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A Ranking of all the Cinderella Retellings I’ve Read
(Completed via a very unscientific method where I try to balance between “I liked it” and “It was well-written.” Your mileage may vary and my ranking would probably vary if I made this list again.)
Ella Enchanted by Gail Carson Levine: The Gold Standard. The retelling that started it all for me. Manages to twist the fairy tale (even dislike some parts of it) while remaining true to the heart of it. A+ worldbuilding, A+++ ending.
A Cinder’s Tale by Stephanie Ricker (in the Five Glass Slippers collection): A sci-fi retelling where Cinderella works a highly-dangerous space mining job. Fantastic worldbuilding with a wonderful ensemble cast.
Bella at Midnight by Diane Stanley: Cinderella meets Joan of Arc. Has a fantastic multi-first-person-narrator structure. Some of the fairy tale plot points are an awkward fit, but I still enjoyed it.
Before Midnight by Cameron Dokey: A fairly basic retelling with a fantastic autumnal atmosphere that tempts me to reread it every year, even though the story’s rather basic and the ending’s too convenient.
Cinder by Marissa Meyer: The famous science-fantasy retelling. There are things I don’t like about the series, but this first book is a solid retelling with some good twists. I like it less than several others on this list, but it’s too solid to rank it much lower.
The Stepsister and the Slipper by Nina Clare: If Georgette Heyer wrote fantasy. Cinderella’s spunky stepsister and a roguish hero manipulate each other in competing schemes. The worldbuilding’s sketchy and the ending’s very rushed, but I had too much fun to care too much.
Soot and Slipper by Kate Stradling: Fantastic twist, adorable relationship between Cinderella and her prince, a sweet and melancholy atmosphere, and an underwhelming ending.
The Reluctant Godfather by Allison Tebo: Wodehouse meets Cinderella, starring a very grumpy fairy baker. Gets a bit too slapstick, but its snarky, silly vibe is a breath of fresh air in a YA-romance-dominated retelling world.
Traitor’s Masque by Kenley Davidson: I love the Ruritanian atmosphere and the political tension between the two brothers, even though it’s at least 33% too wordy and the plot makes less sense the more you think about it.
The Windy Side of Care by Rachel Heffington (from the Five Glass Slippers anthology): Cinderella meets Shakespeare. Has a strong voice, a heroine with a ton of spunk, and a fun “fairy godfather”.
Fated by Kaylin Lee: Great magical-1930s worldbuilding. The characters were also solid. The plot was a bit too long and too convenient at points. But the worldbuilding is the draw here.
The Earl of Highmott Hall by Nina Clare: Another Regency fairy tale by this author. Probably technically better-done than The Stepsister and the Slipper but I found it less fun.
Silver Woven in my Hair by Shirley Rousseau Murphy: Short and sweet little book with minimal magic and a lot of charm, but I don’t remember much about it anymore.
Midnight’s Curse by Tricia Mingerink: Set in a European-castle + American frontier setting that’s unique (even if I can’t quite decide if it’s cultural appropriation), with some interesting twists and themes.
The Spinner and the Slipper by Camryn Lockhart: Mashes up Cinderella and Rumpelstiltskin with just a touch of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. If I remember right, it did a decent job of it. The loving competition between Auberon and Titania was fun.
Letters by Cinderlight + Wishes by Starlight by Jacque Stevens: A Russian-ish retelling with some fantastic ideas (parts of it reminded me of Ella Enchanted) and unfortunately shaky execution. If it had been better written, it may have been one of my favorites.
Just Ella by Margaret Peterson Haddix: I was pleasantly surprised by parts of this (mostly Ella’s character arc of learning to accept help) and hated other parts (the villains were completely unbelievable strawman caricatures). In the balance, I’ll stick it here.
Mask of Scarlet by Sarah Pennington: Set in a very unique and very complicated 1920s Chicago + Iceland world. Of the series, this was the book where I was best able to understand the worldbuilding, and I think the fairy tale was decently done, but even though I read it earlier this year, I remember almost nothing specific.
Princess of Glass by Jessica Day George: This one’s hard to rank because I think it was decently written, but I remember so little about it. I’ll stick it here, for whatever that’s worth.
What Eyes Can See by Elisabeth Brown (from the Five Glass Slippers anthology): Sweet, magic-free Regency-ish retelling with a very shy Cinderella and a nice stepfamily. It’s a bit basic, but it’s grown on me over time.
The Moon-Master’s Ball by Clare Diane Thompson (from the Five Glass Slippers anthology): Very strong autumnal and slightly spooky atmosphere. I remember liking this one well enough, but can’t remember much else about it.
The Other Cinderella by Beka Gremikova: This treats Fairy Tales as an external worldbuilding thing (people are cast in fated roles, etc.), which I usually hate, but there’s a twist at the end that impressed me.
A Gown of Spider Silk by A.G. Marshall: Short story retelling with one twist that’s kind of fun, but not quite my thing.
Another Midnight by Amanda Marin: Short-story Cinderella involving a time-loop. I remember almost nothing about it, but I think it was decent enough.
Cinders and Blades by Amanda Kaye: Short story Russian-influenced retelling. I remember almost nothing except that it disappointed me.
Slipper in the Snow by Alice Ivinya: Another short story. I remember even less about this one.
Rook di Goo by Jenni Sauer: I was promised Cinderella meets Firefly. I got an ensemble cast I didn’t connect with, worldbuilding I didn’t understand (what do they even do with their spaceship?), and a fairy tale that felt shoehorned-in.
The Stepsister’s Tale by Tracy Barrett: I don’t remember much except that I found it disappointing.
Broken Glass by Emma Clifton (from the Five Glass Slippers anthology): Mildly steampunk retelling imagining that the slipper fits the wrong girl. The humor here just isn’t my cup of tea, and the ending doesn’t make sense.
The Coronation Ball by Melanie Cellier: Short, shmaltzy and basic. There’s nothing that terrible about it, but for some reason there’s a lingering distaste that makes me recoil from it.
Cinderella (As If You Didn’t Already Know the Story) by Barbara Ensor: Written for lower middle-grade. One of those fairy tale retellings that thinks making anachronistic references is clever. It’s not.
Happily by Chauncey Rogers: Ugh. There’s one really dumb twist to the fairy tale that’s so dumb that it makes me angry just thinking about it, regardless of what else may be in the story (I don’t remember much else).
Mechanica by Betsy Cornwall: Double ugh. It had such a promising premise, but I hated so many things about this worldview that it gets the bottom ranking forever.
#fairy tale retellings#cinderella#fairy tales#i've wanted to make this list for a long while#my memories of most are too vague to be useful#but this longing has now been satisfied
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On April 16, 2007, Dr. Liviu Librescu, a 76-year-old Holocaust survivor, was killed while blocking the doors of his Virginia Tech classroom with his body as the gunman tried to enter, giving all but one of his students time to escape through the classroom windows.
On April 3, 2009, a receptionist named Shirley DeLucia was shot through the stomach at the American Civic Association in Binghamton and nonetheless remained on the line to 911 for almost 40 minutes, relaying information to the SWAT team (this particular mass shooting happened right down the road from where I was working at the time, incidentally, so it’s a little close to home).
On December 14, 2012, Victoria Soto, Lauren Rousseau, and Rachel D’Avino, all teachers and aides at Sandy Hook Elementary School, were killed trying to get their students to safety. Anne Marie Murphy was shot multiple times while shielding six-year-old Dylan Hockley with her body. Neither survived.
On June 17, 2015, 26-year-old Tywanza Sanders was killed trying to shield his great-aunt from a gunman at Emmanuel AME Church in Charleston. Prior to the shooting, the victims had welcomed the gunman into their Bible study session.
On June 12, 2016, Imran Yousuf, a Marine veteran and a bouncer at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, got as many as 70 people out of the club after the shooting started.
On March 15, 2019, Adeeb Sami was shot in the back shielding his children from the gunman in Christchurch, NZ. Daoud Nabi was killed protecting another worshipper; reportedly, his last words were to welcome his murderer into the mosque. Naeem Rashid was killed trying to tackle the gunman. His 21-year-old son Talha was also killed.
*
These are just the ones I know of off the top of my head. I just. Maybe we could give some of the obsessive attention we aim at mass shooters to the people who acted bravely in the face of their violence, huh? Because I swear to god, if I have to read another thinkpiece on the topic of ‘Let Us Delve Into The Soul Of This Pathetic Asshole Who Decided To Murder People Because His Life Sucked’, my brain may explode.
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"Dulcie said there were no cats in the Bible, but Kit wasn't sure she believed that. Why would there be horses and cows and dogs, wild pigs and weasels, but no cats? Why, when everyone knew that a little cat would have to be God's favorite?"
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#CAT CHASE THE MOON By Shirley Rousseau Murphy
PEACE
I have read all the books in the Joe Grey series and the 21st book was a reunion with old friends and some new ones. If I have a problem with reading, a Joe Grey book helps me to start reading other books. The paranormal aspects don’t bother me. For a light, fun and reading book this great.
Joe and Dulcie’s family are growing and getting their own personalities. Buffin and Striker are…
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Book Review: “Cat Playing Cupid” from the Joe Grey Mystery Series… My Rating: 5 STARS This fourteenth outing for the Joe Grey Mystery Series was both fun and intriguing for me.
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