Difference between revisions of "Cat-A-Lyst"

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I enjoyed [[Cat-A-Lyst]] -- perhaps a bit more than I "should" have.
 
I enjoyed [[Cat-A-Lyst]] -- perhaps a bit more than I "should" have.
  
Alan Dean Foster is one of those authors that you do not necessarily read for ''depth''.  However, some of his books hold a place in my bookcase as some of the funniest books I have read.  (One of my favorites was Codgerspace (ISBN 0-727-84685-X), even though it has very often been eviscerated by reviewers.)  He is best when he is doing an original story, but is not taking himself too seriously.  (However, he is best ''known'' for his movie novelizations.)  I suppose you have to be in the right mood for his comedy, and this week I was.
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Alan Dean Foster is one of those authors that you do not necessarily read for ''depth''.  However, some of his books hold a place in my bookcase as some of the funniest books I have read.  (One of my favorites was Codgerspace (ISBN 0-727-84685-X), even though it has very often been eviscerated by reviewers.)  He is best when he is writing an original story, but is not taking himself too seriously.  (However, he is best ''known'' for his movie novelizations.)  I suppose you have to be in the right mood for his comedy, and this week I was.
  
 
I loved the references to [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hunting_of_the_Snark The Hunting of the Snark] by [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lewis_Carroll Lewis Carroll].  (Or, as the Boojums refer to him, Charles Dodgson.)  I particularly got a kick out of his description of the Boojums, (which Carroll left intentionally undescribed).  Anyone who is familiar with Mexican flora, would recognize the description as that of a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boojum_tree Boojum ''Tree''], (which shows Foster's interest in ecology).   
 
I loved the references to [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hunting_of_the_Snark The Hunting of the Snark] by [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lewis_Carroll Lewis Carroll].  (Or, as the Boojums refer to him, Charles Dodgson.)  I particularly got a kick out of his description of the Boojums, (which Carroll left intentionally undescribed).  Anyone who is familiar with Mexican flora, would recognize the description as that of a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boojum_tree Boojum ''Tree''], (which shows Foster's interest in ecology).   

Revision as of 17:42, 23 September 2006

Author Alan Dean Foster
ISBN ISBN 0-441-64661-1
Published 1991
Pages 325
Date read 2006.09.23
Rating 8/7


This one is for the cat lovers out there.

...or the Incan aficionados.

...or just those who like sci-fi humor.

I enjoyed Cat-A-Lyst -- perhaps a bit more than I "should" have.

Alan Dean Foster is one of those authors that you do not necessarily read for depth. However, some of his books hold a place in my bookcase as some of the funniest books I have read. (One of my favorites was Codgerspace (ISBN 0-727-84685-X), even though it has very often been eviscerated by reviewers.) He is best when he is writing an original story, but is not taking himself too seriously. (However, he is best known for his movie novelizations.) I suppose you have to be in the right mood for his comedy, and this week I was.

I loved the references to The Hunting of the Snark by Lewis Carroll. (Or, as the Boojums refer to him, Charles Dodgson.) I particularly got a kick out of his description of the Boojums, (which Carroll left intentionally undescribed). Anyone who is familiar with Mexican flora, would recognize the description as that of a Boojum Tree, (which shows Foster's interest in ecology).

A snark is most definitely not a Boojum.

There are also references to von Däniken's Chariots of the Gods. (Referred to in the book as Hubcaps of the Gods. I love it!)

The references to Incan / Peruvian culture were great! My favorite passage is at the end of the book, when the 'extra-dimensional Incas' were found after they had been... misplaced:

It was twelve years later that a Taiwanese fishing boat operation [...] came across an unvisited island populated entirely by South American Indians.
[...]
Norwegian scientists insisted that here at last was proof conclusive that the Polynesian islands had been settled by explorers from Peru. The rest of the anthropological community said nothing of the sort, often adding commentary of their own that was less than polite.

(If you do not understand the humor in that, here is a hint.)


--Tometheus 13:06, 23 September 2006 (EDT)