Hardcover
Koko and Yum Yum are on the case when a bee sting leads to a less than innocent death in this 29th installment of the Cat Who series.
Also available in: Hardcover | Lrg Print Hardcover
Mem. Ed. $13.99
Pub. Ed. $23.95
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The Cat Who Knew Shakespeare/The Cat Who Sniffed Glue/The Cat Who Went Underground
Hardcover
This exclusive Mystery Guild omnibus edition contains three tales of Qwill and his sleuthing Siamese: The Cat Who Knew Shakespeare, The Cat Who Sniffed Glue, and The Cat Who Went Underground.
Exclusive!
Mem. Ed. $12.99
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Hardcover
This latest installment of Lilian Jackson Braun’s “Cat Who” series solves a murder for the books.
Mem. Ed. $6.99
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The Cat Who Brought Down the House
Hardcover
Jim, Koko and Yum Yum can’t wait for the upcoming Kit Kat Revue, a gala fundraiser for felines. The last thing they need is a corpse and a parrotnapping. Can they sort things out before murder steals the show?
Mem. Ed. $12.99
Pub. Ed. $23.95
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The Cat Who Saw Red/The Cat Who Played Brahms/The Cat Who Played Post Office
Hardcover
Pounce on these delightful tales of feline detection—three of Ms. Braun’s earliest novels previously available only in paperback. Find out how Qwill inherited his millions in The Cat Who Played Post Office.
Mem. Ed. $10.99
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Hardcover
Up in the Potato Mountains, Qwill finds himself enmeshed in a feud between moonshiners and real estate developers.
Mem. Ed. $6.99
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Though she has authored 29 novels in the light-hearted Cat Who… series starring a pair of sleuthing Siamese cats, little is known about Lilian Jackson Braun. One of that rare breed of writers who prefers to keep her private life private, Braun began her writing career as a teen penning sports poems for the Detroit News. She worked as an ad copywriter for the city’s department stores before she began her 30-year stint as the “Good Living” editor for the Detroit Free Press. Braun’s first three Cat Who… books burst on the scene in the 1960s—the New York Times called her “the new detective of the year”—then she vanished from the scene for 18 years, undone by the rising trend toward explicit sex, rough language and violence in mystery-fiction. Luckily, she was reintroduced to the field in 1986 with The Cat Who Saw Red, and the rest is history!
