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THREE YORK CAT MYSTERIES IN ONE!The Case of the Clementhorpe KillerWhen Theodore discovers his neighbour, pigeon-fancier Peter Morris with his head bashed in, he sets out on the trail of the Clementhorpe Killer.Set among the back alleys of York, this is murder mystery with a feline twist. It is Theodore's first foray into crime detection.The Cat Who Knew Too MuchAfter Theodore moves to the York suburb of Acomb with his owners, there is soon a murder in the house behind but only Theodore knows there is a killer in the suburban midst. How is he to prove it and make sure that the justice is served?With many references to classic Hitchcock films, this is a comic romp through the leafy suburbs, leaving many a bloody footprint (and pawprint) on the well-trimmed lawns.The Call of the Cat BasketTheodore, our reluctant cat detective, goes after escaped convict Milton Macavity. It is Bonfire Night and protestors have descended on York in their thousands. The pursuit takes Theodore into the crowded city centre.Will Theodore be able to stop Bonfire Night ending with a bang and return to the comfort of his home and his rather vocal cat basket?
Pierre Loti, a young French sailor, arrives in Salonika to witness the hangings of several Turks at the harbourside. Behind the bars of a window by the mosque, he spies a young Turkish woman. He begins a love affair with this woman who he calls Aziyadé but whose real name was Hatijay. The romance continued in Constantinople that winter and ended when Loti got his orders to sail in March 1877.Jonathan is an English language teacher in Istanbul in the late 1980s. When he discovers his flatmate Harry dead in the bath, the word ''Loti'' written into the grime of the tiled wall and the book Aziyadé left open on his desk, his life takes an unexpected course.Orhan, a young tea boy, encounters a strange foreigner dressed like a Turkish pasha accompanying a carriage carried through the streets of Constantinople. The carriage contains his aging guardian Khadija. He follows the group to the cemeteries beyond the city''s ancient walls, their destination: his mother''s grave.The Naked Orientalist combines both historical and contemporary chapters to explore Loti, his Turkish lover Hatijay and his first book Aziyadé.
Rear Garden: The Cat Who Knew Too Much is the second novel to feature York's finest feline sleuth, Theodore.After Theodore moves to the York suburb of Acomb with his owners, Jonathan and Emily, Jonathan breaks his foot and is incapacited for several weeks. With nothing to do but watch Hitchcock films and stare out of the French doors at the houses behind, he soon suspects that there is a murderer at large. Theodore knows that there is a killer in the suburban midst. But how is he to prove it and make sure that the killer gets what's coming to her.With many references to classic Hitchcock fillms, Rear Garden is a comic romp through the leafy suburbs, leaving many a bloody footprint (and pawprint) on the well-trimmed lawns.
In the outbuilding of a terraced house in Clementhorpe, York, the body of pigeon-fancier Peter Morris lies waiting to be discovered. In the grey light of dawn a large grey fluffy cat enters the yard - just because the gate has been left open. The cat is called Theodore. Theodore looks at the dead body with the same interest he would a dead moth. Murder, he thinks, and goes to alert his owner Emily. Within the hour Theodore is accused by the newly-widowed Wendy of eating one of Peter’s pigeons. He resolves to clear his name and unmask the Clementhorpe Killer.Suspects include Wendy; Craig Foster – a red-haired loner; Ahmet and Zeynep – the Turkish couple up the street; artist Michael and his boyfriend Philip; divorcee Diane, and then there’s Emily’s new boyfriend Jonathan.The First of Nine is Theodore’s first foray into crime investigation. It is a cat’s take on the murder mystery novel. It is the first of his nine lives.
James Barrie's My Mayenne is an account of the author's love affair witha part of Fraoce that has escaped mass tourism. In the late eighties, Barrieand his wife began their search for a house in France, a task which is notas easy as it may sound. This is the story of the house they fond, thetrials and tribulations of renovating what was at first an uninhabitabledwelling, and their adventures in a new country.With loving detail, and in a conversational and intimate style, Barrieoffers his readers a collection of anecdotes, recounting incidenlS as variedas his first meeting with Pierre Medoc, so called because 'he was alwaysbetter after he had finished the second bottle', to a family trip to Le MontSt.Michel to find a very important fireplace, and monks with dirty feet!Evident in all these lively accounts is Barrie's love of the country, itspeople and ofcourse its wine!
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