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Cat in a Jeweled Jumpsuit

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Midnight Louie, the hugely popular jet-black feline sleuth who thinks he's Sam Spade with hairballs, returns for an eleventh outing in this cozy-noir series. This time his human partner, Temple Barr, learn that the remodeling of the Crystal Phoenix Hotel is being held up by a ghost: the workmen swear its Elvis. The opening of Las Vegas' first Elvis-themed attraction might explain this unscheduled appearance. With death threats, a late night caller and a dead Elvis, the question is not only whodunit and why; but also, was the King himself really dead again, or for the first time...or not at all?

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 1, 1999
      Douglas aims at two subcultures in addition to her usual target of cat lovers in her latest Midnight Louie caper (after Cat in an Indigo Mood, Forecasts, Mar. 15). This time, Temple Bar's all-black, crime-solving tomcat finds his whiskers twitching in Las Vegas, where the Kingdome, an Elvis-inspired mega-shrine, is opening. As Louie pads knowingly through all the gaudy paraphernalia and Elvis look-alikes, construction at a nearby hotel is halted as the crew claim sightings of the King. Public relations expert Temple must investigate the bejeweled and becaped phenomenon. Everybody gets shaken and rattled (and some get rolled) as Elvis sightings abound. Temple's close friend, radio shrink Matt Devine, receives a call one night from the man from Tupelo, and the daughter of Temple's nemesis, Crawford Buchanan, is dressed like Priscilla and getting death threats. Douglas regularly slips between narrative voices: a possibly real Elvis talks some, as does Midnight Louie. Most of the Elvis lore is common knowledge and bloats the tale. The plot progression is staggered even if the accompanying banter is often cute. Cat-crazy readers with a thing for both Elvis and Vegas will enjoy Douglas's blend of goofball coziness and Midnight Louie's mock noir slinkings and sleuthings.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      An Elvis impersonation contest is the setting, and Temple Bar, private eye, is on the case. Thompson's throaty voice draws the listener into the character as she hunts for an elusive ghost. Gilliland depicts the ghost of Elvis with a charming Southern drawl that is slow and sensual as he calls into the local radio show at midnight each night, implying that Elvis never died. Forster represents the shrewd and irreverent feline private eye, Midnight Louie, who is joined by Chatter, the hit man's chimp. Together they track down the killer of the Elvis impersonators. Elvis's music is nostalgic and pleasant to the ear. G.D.W. (c) AudioFile 2000, Portland, Maine

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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