Reviewed by Jane on

4 of 5 stars

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Cats are such cats. Having twelve at once, within one vicinity is—first of all—expensive, even if you live on a farm. Second, they all have their own personalities. In "The 12 Cats of Christmas", Missy opens doors. I'm a cat person, so I expected much of the stuff cats do naturally, but I always enjoy witnessing dog people react to cat behaviors. For example, this quote:
"Dogs kind of default to making friends unless provoked. Cats seem to default to making enemies unless convinced otherwise."

The ending was a bit abrupt. The book appears edited well; there are just a few typos. I also prefer numbers to be in written form in books, so I wasn't a fan of them written numerically in the instances they were.

Main character Gloria also bugged me at times, but then she's a dog person—she doesn't seem to enjoy having seven cats much. I, however, fell into having eight once—not on purpose, and definitely NOT planned—and then couldn't adopt them out because I fell in love with them, and they fell in love with me, and there was just...no. going. back. She's also got this bit of...well...excitability going on, much like dogs do. I wasn't into her anger/frustration about the situation (though it's probably because I've been in a similar situation).

I think the investigative figure-this-out side was a bit dramatic and redundant, because the obvious thing to do seemed to go to the shelter the adoption papers in the box attributed to—not a private investigator for tips on the matter.

"The 12 Cats of Christmas" is adorable, though. I expected a children's book, but I like how it's geared towards adults—so much cute!

It's currently free on Amazon. I don't know how long it will be.~

Blog review: http://crunchyfamily.com/2017/12/12-cats-christmas/

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 16 December, 2017: Finished reading
  • 16 December, 2017: Reviewed