The Intricate Process of Writing a Cat Mystery

Lily recommends Catnapped

Lily recommends Catnapped

Cats are some of the most interesting creatures on earth. And there are new cat stories being played out every minute of every day in homes, shelters and on the streets throughout the world. There are hundreds of books of cat stories—some true accounts and some rather far-fetched. There are also a growing number of novels—especially mysteries—involving cats. Authors, including me, are having a blast creating stories around the mysterious cat and there are a lot of readers for such books, as well.

Cats are mysterious. They seem to know things beyond our comprehension. And cats have definitely been the inspiration for countless stories and pieces of art. OMG, I have a lot of cat books—both fiction and nonfiction. I have kitty cat earrings, key rings, calendars, mouse pad, refrigerator magnets, figurines, artwork, screensaver, clothing and more. I love to photograph cats and have won some awards with my photos. I used to write articles about cats for various cat magazines. I’ve covered such subjects as cat personalities, caring for a new kitten, the Pallas cat, holistic meds and cats, raising a feral kitten, shop and library cats and more. I came out with my collection of true cat stories a few years ago.

When I decided I wanted to write fiction—something I’ve been considering for years—of course, I wanted to write about cats. But in what vein? I would need a starring cat. There would be no talking cats or cats that were personified to an unbelievable degree. He (or she) needed to have an unusual, yet catlike style or characteristic. I decided to pattern the starring cat after my mother’s cat, Smokey, but with my cat, Lily’s habit of carrying things around in her mouth. After thinking about this combination, I began considering the concept of kleptomania. Why not expand on Lily’s habit and make the cat a kleptomaniac? I figured this trait would come in handy for solving murder mysteries.

As far as naming the cat, I can’t even tell you how it happened. I just began writing the first story, Catnapped, and the characters started naming themselves. I only changed one or two minor characters’ names after the writing was done. The featured cat is Ragsdale—Rags for short. Sometimes his owner, Savannah, calls him “Ragsie.” I tried numerous times to change that name, but it stuck big time. I’ve never known a cat named Rags, don’t even much care for the name. But this is the cat’s name, nonetheless.

Naming characters can be an interesting process. While some authors develop their characters and name them before they start writing the book, others (like me) let the characters introduce themselves as the story progresses and they usually come with names.

The Catnapped story is based on an incident that actually occurred in a community in one of California’s interior valleys. Only there wasn’t an intuitive, kleptomaniac cat to help solve the crimes. Is stealing a cat a crime? That’s an interesting question. It used to be that you could not legally own a cat—they were considered free spirits. Even when you had the registration papers, cats could not be owned. There was a well-known case in CA during the 1970s where someone stole a cat from a family and the police could not legally make the thief return it. I wonder if the process of chipping cats has changed that. Does anyone know?

If you’d like to know how my mind works when it comes to writing fiction and how Rags’s klepto habit led to solving the mystery, read Catnapped. It’s on Kindle at Amazon.com.
http://amzn.to/14OCk0W It’s only $2.99.

Watch for the announcement of the second in the Klepto Cat Mystery series, Cat-Eye Witness coming next week!!!

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A Happy Cat Brings Many Rewards

Lily lapping it up.

Lily lapping it up.

If you’ve read Catscapades, True Cat Tales, you know who Lily is—and Max, Sophie, Katy, Daisy, Gus, Crystal, PomPom and others. Catscapades is at Amazon and here: http://www.matilijapress.com/Catscapades

Lily has had quite a busy young life. She has starred as Tinkerbell in Peter Pan. She was the piano player in one production and she has been featured on a Workman Cat-A-Day calendar amidst a scattering of alphabet blocks. Now she will have her own greeting card. She is among several cats chosen to appear on note cards. In this shot, she’s sitting in front of a small water bowl waiting for her stuffed baby possum to drink.

Does your cat try to drown her stuffed toys? Lily often carries her furry spider, baby possum, tiny polar bear, colorful birds, mice toys or little brown teddy to the various water bowls throughout the house and drops them in. Is she being the good mommy and offering them water?

She loves water. Lily spends more time at her water bowls than most cats spend doing practically anything else. She especially loves running water. After we fixed the leak in the bathroom faucet and had the bathtub resurfaced, we bought her a water fountain. And she lets us know when she wants it turned on, either by herding us into the room where it is or knocking the lid off the top of it. Sometimes she just sits next to it and waits for us to notice. We notice. She’s pretty determined and persistent. And boy do we love to make her happy. The rewards of a happy cat are enormous.

Catnapped, the first in my Klepto Cat Mystery series is collecting some great reviews. I got two 5-star reviews within the last week. That’s nice. I’m glad people are enjoying the story. This novel is loosely based on a true story, you know. There were cats being stolen in one California city and no one knew where they were being taken and why. This story also involves horses to an extent and the story around the horses was written around a true story I once heard about. Of course both instances were greatly embellished in order to create a more interesting story. There’s a little romance thrown in and a murder mystery.

Get your Kindle copy of Catnapped today. It’s only $2.99. http://amzn.to/14OCk0W

Read more about me and my work here: http://www.patriciafry.com

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Can’t Get Kitty to Eat?

Feeding cats can be a challenge. There are the extremes: kitty eats everything in sight and begs for more or she turns her nose up at every morsel you offer. Thankfully, most cats fit somewhere in the middle most of the time.

My mother has a big boy of a cat with a solid, muscular build who only eats a bite or two from his fancy china plate morning, noon and night. He has a buddy who hangs around, seemingly for the sole purpose of cleaning up Smokey’s leftovers. Gibbs began showing up at my mother’s house a year or so ago. He obviously belongs to someone. The tag on his collar says “Gibbs” and gives a phone number. But he is thin and trim despite the gourmet meals Smokey leaves for him on a daily basis.

So why is Gibbs so thin and why is Smokey so buff? Smokey is one of those cats you cannot keep in, to my mother’s chagrin. At 91, she was hoping this part ragdoll kitten would cozy up in her lap. And he does, only after he has spent the day adventuring in the eucalyptus grove behind her tract of homes. Since he roams the neighborhood, one has to wonder, is Smokey eating at Gibbs’s house or maybe he is scrounging food from several neighbors. We know he does some hunting—he has brought my mother an array of critters.

I’ve had two cats over time who refused meals at least on occasion. Both were in renal failure. Currently, it is our little Lily. She’s only four, but has been diagnosed with kidney disease. She loves her special diet and most of the holistic supplements we give her each day—only some days she just doesn’t seem interested in food. Yes, we’re feeding her pumpkin and probiotics to help her digestion.

Lily

Lily

It breaks a mommy’s heart to see a kitty who was obsessed by food to suddenly turn away from it. However, I’ve found that if I hand-feed her, she will eat. So a few times a week, when Lily doesn’t seem to have a stomach for her food or the energy to eat it, I get down on my hands and knees and feed her small amounts from my fingers. Then she curls up in my lap and sleeps contentedly, while I sit here and write my blog. A little later, she’ll be up chasing around the house with Sophie kitty, helping me make the bed, begging for bites of my cantaloupe or cooked carrots and watching the hummingbirds through the office window.

Speaking of feeding cats, all of our cats are formerly feral or their mothers were. Sophie was found in a cat colony at 10-weeks. I guess it is because of her early imprinting, but we are not allowed to watch her eat. All of our cats are inside cats. When we feed Sophie, we have to put her plate down and then slip away to another part of the house or at least sit quietly until she is finished eating.

Max eats only kibbles. We can’t get him to eat the canned kidney support food the vets have prescribed for both him and Lily. He’s 14 and a half and in the early stages of kidney failure. Unlike Lily, he has no symptoms, yet. Max, like Sophie, does not want an audience while eating.

What are your cat-feeding challenges? What crazy things are you doing to appease your cat?

Lily has been featured in two books. Her story, along with the story of several other cats, appears in Catscapades, True Cat Tales ( http://www.matilijapress.com) And Layla in Catnapped, the first in my Klepto Cat Mystery series, is loosely patterned after Lily. Rags, the kleptomaniac cat who always has a paw in solving the crime, is Smokey. Read Catnapped on your Kindle and watch for the 2nd in the series, Cat-Eye Witness. In this story, Rags meets with a cat psychic and he is a witness in a line-up. http://amzn.to/14OCk0W

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When You Get That Second Opinion

Lily and Sophie

Lily and Sophie

I’m traveling soon and leaving the care of our kitties in the hands of our dear neighbor. Because Lily is suffering from kidney disease, and was beginning to lose ground—wasn’t thriving—I have been consulting with a holistic vet by phone. His office is a couple thousand miles away. He has Lily’s medical records from my local vet. Together, we have Lily on a routine that seems to be working well for her. And some of it is new to her local vet.

I documented Lily’s food, supplements, etc. for the local vet for her input and also so she knows what Lily’s getting in case our neighbor has to bring her in for a visit while we’re gone.

I think it’s important to consult with other vets in unusual situations when the cat is not responding well to traditional treatment. It appears that with the diet our local vet suggested, the research I did on my own that was okayed by both the local vet and the consulting vet and the additions we experimented with suggested by the consulting vet, we’re on a good track.

For the last two weeks, Lily is eating well again. She has more energy and is more active. I am a happy Kitty Mama.

For us, so far, it is working to treat her with a mix of traditional, holistic and a little common sense choices from diligent research. And I believe it is important to keep all of the professionals involved apprised of everything Lily is getting.

If you like cats and if you like to read mysteries, you must read Catnapped, the first in my Klepto Cat Mystery series. You’ll love getting to know Rags, the kleptomaniac cat who always has a paw in solving the crime. It’s on Kindle only here: http://amzn.to/14OCk0W

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Happy Days With Cats

lilyalyzayoldcamera-021Any and all days with cats can be happy days. But when you have a cat with a disease, just seeing her eat and play can make your day.

Do you have a Kindle? I know you like reading about cats. You might enjoy reading my Kindle book, “Catnapped” the first in my Klepto Cat Mystery series. It was published for Kindle in June and revised, proofed and republished this month. Download your copy today–it’s only $2.99 here: http://amzn.to/14OCk0W

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The Healing Touch of Cats

tuckerAnyone who has spent much time with cats has experienced or observed some incredible coincidences. Those who say they haven’t, are probably not paying attention. A friend of mine, naturally someone who appreciates cats, told me this story over the weekend.

My friend has been having some serious cardiac problems over the last few months. Last Sunday, she was lying back in her chair experiencing the discomfort of fibrillation and chest pains. This had been happening to her several times a day for the past month. She said that, all of a sudden, “Tucker (her black and white cat) jumped into my lap, laid down on my stomach, looked up at me, then closed his eyes and placed one paw over my heart—something he has never done before.” She says, “The fibrillation and chest pain stopped and he jumped off my lap.”

The next day, she had an appointment with her cardiologist for a stress test and her initial test results were good. She’ll know more about her condition when she sees her cardiologist later this month. But she reports that, since Tucker used his healing paw, she is no longer having the daily discomfort.

Is this a goose-bump story or what? Yet, those of us who know cats, should not be stunned or even goose-bumpily. Cats are incredibly intuitive. They can heal the emotional heart as well as, it seems, the physical heart.

Cats know things. I have stories in Catscapades, my book of true cat stories demonstrating the cats’ keen understanding of things way beyond our own understanding.

I’d like to read some of your stories related to cats healing or being incredibly intuitive.

In the meantime, my new novel Catnapped, a Klepto Cat Mystery is collecting more and more reviews and is climbing higher on the Kindle charts. Be sure to order the revised, updated version for your Kindle today. http://amzn.to/14OCk0W

Leave your comment about healing cats here at this blog.

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FREE Book of Cat Stories

Baby Lily and Friend

Baby Lily and Friend

Yes, it’s true. If you order Catnapped, the first in my Klepto Cat Mystery for your Kindle this weekend at http://amzn.to/14OCk0W I’ll send you a free copy of my print book, Catscapades, True Cat Tales as a gift.

Catnapped is just $2.99. Order your copy and then email me at plfry620@yahoo.com I’ll ask a question about the story. If you respond correctly, I’ll send you the free book. Oh, by the way, it has lots of kitty photographs.

Offer expires midnight Sunday, September 15, 2013.

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Catnapped–New/Improved for your Kindle

Catnapped, the first in the Klepto Cat Mystery series, has been revised, corrected and is now available for your Kindle. If you didn’t order Catnapped for your Kindle yet, now is an excellent time to do so.

We published the original version in June. We replaced it with a new, proofed, revised edition the first of August. After a whole month, we discovered the old version was still going out to customers. Big bummer. We have resubmitted the new version and have checked and double checked to make sure this is the version being sent to customers. All seems to be right with Amazon now. The new version of Catnapped is being sent to customers. Please order your copy now. http://amzn.to/14OCk0W

smoky-008Catnapped, the first in the Klepto Cat Mystery Series. (Cozy Mystery)
Storyline: When Savannah Jordan agrees to help her Aunt Margaret while she recovers from a broken foot, she doesn’t expect to walk into a mystery, become part of a not-quite-legal surveillance team, be kidnapped by a deranged stranger and meet a steaming hot veterinarian.

Beloved neighborhood cats are missing—the community can only guess at their fate—and Aunt Margaret’s life is being threatened. Is it because she has a clue to the missing cats or is it something more sinister? Of course, as in all of the Klepto Cat Mysteries, Rags, an ordinary cat with a most unusual habit, has a paw in saving the day.

If you like light mysteries with only a little terror, if you’re infatuated by interesting cats and if you love a love story, you must read this book. It’s at Amazon in Kindle only. Read some of the reviews here: http://www.matilijapress.com/Catnapped

The cat pictured today is Smoky. He’s the cat I patterned Rags (the klepto cat) after. It’s obvious that his fame is going to his head—now he has to have a fancy pillow to lay his head on when he relaxes after a day of greeting his fans and pawing autographs.

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Drama in a Multiple Cat Household

arizonaandmore-010We have only three cats. Our maximum in recent years was four. Although I know many people with oodles more cats and I, myself, had a total of eleven at one time—years ago.

I’m pretty sure that most people don’t say, “I want two cats,” or “I’d like to have just one,” or “I think I’ll adopt four cats.” For most of us, cats come into our lives rather unexpectedly. So the one you adopted from the animal shelter is soon joined by a neighborhood stray who needed a home, and they may soon be joined by a kitten your daughter found on her way to work one day and on and on and on…

I sense a lot of nodding heads out there. And then, of course, there are those wonderful kitty angels who open their homes and their hearts to foster cats, elderly and ailing cats, formerly feral cats, and kittens who have lost their mothers, for example. You are definitely a special breed of cat person.

We currently have three kitties in our household. When problems arise, it can seem like more than twelve. And problems can come up anytime you bring animals into your house. There can be (and probably will be) medical problems, behavior problems and personality problems among a household of one to twenty-one cats. There are decisions to make—should I feed raw food, what changes can I make to keep Max from urinating on the carpet, how can I keep Lily from eating Sophie’s food, which medical or holistic remedy should I choose, should the cat be allowed to go outside sometimes, how can I encourage the cats to sleep in their beds instead of on the furniture, why does Lily lose control of her bladder while sleeping, sometimes, and on and on and on.

If you have cats, you probably spend a lot of time searching online for answers to your cat-related questions. And then you probably spend more time trying to decide which of the responses will work for your kitty. For tough issues, after seeing your veterinarian, you may consult with someone outside of the medical field—an animal acupuncturist, for example. We’ve been trying to find beef kidney to feed Lily after a consultation with a holistic veterinarian. And I once had a pet psychic visit for Max.

Yes, a few or a household full of cats can make life interesting. And it is some of these interesting experiences, quirks, challenges and issues that make my Klepto Cat Mystery stories appealing to cat people. Some reviewers for Catnapped, the first book in the series, comment more on the cats in the story than they do the people and the mystery.

If you like cats, you might enjoy reading Catnapped. The main cat, Rags, is patterned loosely after my mother’s cat, Smokey. He’s a one-of-a-kind, confident guy and he’s handsome, too. In my story, Rags is a kleptomaniac and this, along with his extreme curiosity, is what helps him to always be involved in solving the crime at hand. Order your copy for your Kindle here: http://amzn.to/14OCk0W Learn more about the book here, and read some of the reviews: http://www.matilijapress.com/Catnapped/index.html

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Lily Has Kidney Disease

lilysophie-009Lily is in kidney failure and we’re having a heck of a time trying to keep her comfortable. I dealt with this illness with a much older cat once, but Lily’s symptoms are different. The main symptom—the reason why we got the vet involved—was twitching of the skin on her back and a frantic flicking of the tail. This happens two or three times a day. I thought it was, perhaps, allergies. After treating her for fleas (they checked her all over and never could find any), doing a urinalysis, taking x-rays, and finally a blood panel, it was revealed to us that she is in renal failure. Lily is only four-years-old.

The vet recommended a change in diet. After several weeks, Lily is still twitching—same as she has been for the last three months. We’ve done more research. We added fish oil to her diet. We started giving her a remedy called Tinkle Tonic. Yesterday, she had a bad day—just didn’t seem to feel well. We did more research. It occurred to me that maybe she was in pain—that it wasn’t simply itching or discomfort she experiences when she starts twitching, but pain. I discovered that pain definitely can accompany this illness and the experts recommend probiotics.

lilysophie-017Yesterday, we took another trip to the pet healthfood store. We came home with probiotics for animals and pumpkin for digestion. She loves the pumpkin, so we mix the probiotics in with that for a small treat. Too early to tell if this will help.

When Lily has an episode of twitching, she either runs into the bedroom and climbs under the covers to hide for a while or she rushes to me, lays out flat on her tummy—her little paws out in front of her and wants me to scratch her back. I don’t know why, but the scratching, massaging, seems to give her some relief. When she’s had enough of the scratching, she rolls over and starts play-biting my fingers. Then she goes off and drinks from her water fountain or goes in search of Sophie kitty for a little playtime.

Lily is a one-of-a-kind kitty. She was born in a Volkswagen to a feral cat and raised in an attic. She was never handled until she came to us, yet she is and always has been a super friendly, very social little thing. She even loves children—wants to be right in the middle of their projects and games. She has made a lot of friends young and old. If only love could cure a kitty ailment…

Layla is one of the cats in my Klepto Cat Mystery series. She’s on the cover of “Catnapped,” the first in the series. The cover is created from a painting by Bernadette Kazmarski. Layla is loosely patterned after Lily and a couple of other cats I’ve known. It’s her soft and loving personality and adaptability that comes from Lily. To read about Layla and the star of the book, Rags (also pictured on the cover), order your Kindle copy today here: http://amzn.to/14OCk0W

If you have comments or ideas for Lily, please contact us here: plfry620@yahoo.com

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