Tails of Many Cats

Jack makes it in time again – –

This isn’t a story of our cats although they will feature at times and there are certainly many stories about them!

This is the story of our neighborhood cats. We live on the edge of a cat colony, and they use our yard as a highway. They live in an abandoned apartment complex about a block away. Some are solitary and some hang around together but they all know where they can find breakfast, lunch and dinner!

We know that a few of them visit neighbors who also put out food for them and offer porches where they can either sunbathe or find a place to sleep.

There’s a local cat rescue group who regularly trap any newbies and get them spayed and released so things are reasonably under control.

Our frequent visitors are named by us for their colors and obvious personal attributes. We have Orangey, Sherbert, Blacky, Big Blacky, Tippy, Tux, Silver Tux, and Bernard.

Tippy!

Our two cats are fairly understanding about them all except for Tippy, who has been a daily frequent visitor since we moved here five years ago. Our neighbors had already named her because she is all over dark brown except for the tip of her tail which is white. She is extremely friendly and doesn’t just come for food, but likes a head rub and back scratch as well. We think she aspires to be an indoor cat and has occasionally come into the house or the porch. Once she chased young Dammit right through the cat flap into our living room before she realized she was in the house, and sat back with an appraising look. We think she didn’t like the coordination of our rug and curtains…

If our two, Molly and Dammit, are on our enclosed porch (the catio) and Tippy shows up they scream at her and she screams back. Since I don’t speak their language I can’t translate but I have a pretty good idea what they’re saying all the same. So I doubt if they will all three be sharing indoor space anytime soon.

Of the many others who show up regularly, Orangey and Blackie aren’t nearly as friendly as Tippy but are willing to tolerate us as long as we put out the food they prefer – –

The marmalade cat we call, well, Marmalade, likes to sunbathe on the chicken coop roof. The chickens like having her there; we think she may keep the hawks away. Orangey prefers the side yard, and Tux and Silver Tux never stay long, just passing through….

If it came to it, we could house another cat (besides Tippy) but they all seem well content to ease on down the road after a snack at our diner. We think there’s a “friendly people here” sign scratched into a tree someplace. Well, it’s not doing any harm and we buy cat food in bulk. Slink on by, feline friends, and just know if we catch you, we’re going to have you neutered. No harm, no foul, no offspring.

The Monday Book – A Tidy Ending by Joanna Cannon

Guest review by Janelle Bailey, avid reader and always learning; sometimes substitute teaching, sometimes grandbabysitting, sometimes selling books

A Tidy Ending by Joanna Cannon

A Tidy Ending by Joanna Cannon

I saw this one in the new books section of a bookstore earlier this year and added it to my TBR stack right away, having previously enjoyed Joanna Cannon’s Three Things About Elsie and immediately after that purchasing her The Trouble With Goats and Sheep, which I have not yet read. I was not expecting a murder-mystery.

While murder-mysteries are rarely my go-to genre, I do love all books British in setting, so thoroughly enjoyed that aspect of this book. If you have any fondness for that lovely English life, you will, I think, enjoy it for that even if you’re not typically a murder-mystery fan. And if you are a lover of murder-mysteries and haven’t yet read A Tidy Ending, simply head toward it next!

Main character Linda is someone I easily appreciated from the start. I suspect you may also find her to be someone likable, as she is simply always doing and being her best, despite others–even her own mum, at times–making things more challenging for her than they are supporting or encouraging her. Linda, like many of us, possibly, is simply working toward and always doing her best. She struggles, though, to fit in socially, not having a lot of good, true friends. Both at home and at work–she works at a local charity shop, long as a volunteer but now being paid a bit–Linda aims to make a good life and keep a tidy home for her husband and herself.

And there is much tidying to do, as her husband, Terry, is not so spiffy. Actually, he is rather careless and carefree–pretty “care-free” and reckless–in so many ways. And, to boot, there seems to be a serial killer on the loose and possibly right in their local neighborhood or estate. Neighbor Malcolm is on constant watch and uniting the neighborhood, keeping open clear lines of communication as well as making recommendations for safe behavior, all somewhat Neighborhood Watch-like.

Hopefully I have not spoiled a single thing so that you, too, will completely enjoy engaging in A Tidy Life yourself. I sure did. Soon, then, too, I must also read: The Trouble With Sheeps and Goats.

Come back next Monday for another book review!