Author: Lilian Jackson Braun
Genre: Cozy / Pets / Amateur Sleuth
Status: Read
Cats?: Two, and one's got a knack for presenting clues!
Ginger Says:
I've seen Lilian Jackson Braun's "Cat Who..." books on library shelves since I was a kitten, but this is the first time I've actually picked one up to read. I always wondered how these stories were told. For some reason, I assumed I would be reading a book told from a cat's point of view. As it turns out, that wasn't the case. Once I got over the initial disappointment of being told a human story instead of a cat one, I really got into it and had a lot of fun with this book.
The Cat Who Ate Danish Modern features a journalist named Jim Qwilleran who used to work the crime beat. Now he's down on his luck, living in a run-down apartment with a Siamese cat named Koko. When his boss assigns him to an interior design magazine, Qwilleran's not keen. He's clueless about design. It's really not his world... that is, until a crime spree breaks out! Every property he visits seems to get burgled, someone dies, the police raid it as a brothel... the list goes on! Finally, some crime to investigate. Qwilleran's back in his element.
Now, his cat Koko doesn't accompany him on his investigations. That would be pretty neat, but I guess you'd get a reputation if, as a journalist, you brought your cat along to interviews. So Koko stays home while Jim is out and about, but still manages to bring attention to clues leading to whodunit.
When I first picked up this book, I didn't quite realize its age. I was barely three pages into the novel when I said to myself, "When was this written?!?" There are certain concepts, relationships and turns of phrase that struck me as outmoded. That's when I checked the copyright date: 1967. No wonder the book's got a bit of a Mad Men feel about it.
All in all, I ate this book up. It's very witty, consistently amusing, and the characters are a lot of fun: big personalities that keep you wanting more. This is probably my feline bias talking, but I would have enjoyed more time with the cats. Yes there are cats in the book, but it's primarily a human story and a human investigator.
Having said all that, if you're looking for a big-city cozy mystery set in the world of 1960s-era interior design, The Cat Who Ate Danish Modern certainly fits the bill!
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